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SFX

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May 2022

SHORT CIRCUIT SCREENWRITER SS WILSON REVISITS THE CREATION OF THE ’80S’ MOST BELOVED ROBOT NUMBER 5 – AND THE LEGACY OF A PROTO-AI CLASSIC

-  SIMON BLAND

LIVE WIRE

AI, AND THE QUESTION OF IF man-made creations could ever achieve sentience in a way that puts them on a par with humanity, has been the territory of science fiction authors for many decades. Brian Aldiss explored the theme in his story “Supertoys Last All Summer Long”. So did Isaac Asimov in The Bicentennial Man. And television producers and filmmakers soon got in on the act. Years before devising Data, Gene Roddenberry’s TV pilot The Questor Tapes posed the same question. Blade Runner’s Replicants were so indistinguishable from humans that some weren’t even aware of their own true nature. But for many of a certain generation, it was a family-friendly 1986 movie about a wisecracking robot which first made them ponder what it really means to be alive.

Directed by Saturday Night Fever’s John Badham, Short Circuit is a deep story wrapped in a cosy, Sunday-afternoon-movie coating. It follows a government-built war machine designed to destroy that, through a chance lightning strike, is imbued with independent thought and human-like sentience.

Appalled at discovering its intended purpose, the plucky Number 5 ditches the NOVA lab and embarks on a journey into rural America to find a different meaning from the one it was hard-wired for. After meeting empathic animal-lover Stephanie (Ally Sheedy), the knowledge-hungry bot acquires a new mission: to learn more about life on Earth – all while trying to avoid the detection of its creators Newton (Steve Guttenberg) and Benjamin (Fisher Stevens) and the military brass that desperately wants to disassemble their rogue hardware.

MEER VERHALEN VAN SFX

SFX UK

SFX UK

OBJECT Z

Brace for impact

time to read

2 mins

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

THE LONG WALK

Sole survivors

time to read

2 mins

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

DEVIL'S BARGAIN

DIRECTOR JUSTIN TIPPING REVEALS HOW HIS PERSONAL EXPERIENCES MADE HIM THE RIGHT PERSON TO TELL HIM

time to read

7 mins

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Season Three

Where someone has gone before

time to read

2 mins

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

TROUBLE EVERY DAY

Love bites

time to read

1 mins

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

PLAYING GRACIE DARLING

The Kids Are Not Alright

time to read

1 mins

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

STRANGE JOURNEY THE STORY OF ROCKY HORROR

“I loved every minute of it,” says Tim Curry of filming The Rocky Horror Picture Show in 1974. Barry Bostwick has another take: “I was wet and miserable most of the time.” The one thing they do agree on, however, is that the result was a milestone in cinema history.

time to read

1 min

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

DON'T NEED NO EDUCATION

SUPER-POWERED IT'S SOPHOMORE YEAR FOR THE STUDENTS OF GEN VAND THE BOYS' UNIVERSE OVERSEER ERIC KRIPKE PROMISES SFX TENTACLED ANUSES, HIGHER STAKES AND A NEW DEAN DESTINED TO BREAK THE INTERNET

time to read

5 mins

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

GAME CHANGER

SFX HEADS TO VANCOUVER TO VISIT THE TRON: ARES GRID AND TALK ALL THINGS TRON WITH THE FILMMAKERS BEHIND THE LONG-AWAITED SEQUEL

time to read

13 mins

October 2025

SFX UK

SFX UK

Circular Thinking

2 AUGUST 2002 In 1996, Independence Day made a global spectacle of alien invasion, unleashing widescreen violence on the world's famous landmarks. Six years later, M Night Shyamalan's Signs offered an altogether more focused take.

time to read

1 mins

October 2025

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