The best sci-fi movie of 2020 was inspired by a computer meltdown (2024)

Archive began when Gavin Rothery lost everything. Literally.

In October 2011, Rothery was the visual effects director for a London advertising agency when his two home computers simultaneously crashed. His life's work up until that point, including the work he did for the 2009 sci-fi Moon with Duncan Jones, was lost due to hard drive failure.

"That was a real kick in the guts," Rothery tells Inverse. "I was in a weird place for days. I was stressed out."

Rothery's shock felt like mourning. Soon, it planted a seed of a unique sci-fi story about love and loss.

"I had the idea of an A.I. that became self-aware and the only thing it was interested in was killing itself," he says. Upon chewing over the idea more, Rothery found the story that would become his first feature film, Archive.

A new science-fiction thriller, Rothery's movie explores love and death as "universal constants that touch all of us."

In Archive, robotics scientist George (Theo James) races to create true artificial intelligence. Unbeknown to his superiors, George is actually working to create a new body for the limited, digitized consciousness of his dead wife, Jules (Stacy Martin).

Though a love story, technology's fickle habit to evolve brings forth a key emotion that looms over the film: jealousy.

In Archive, George's first two experiments, "J1" and "J2," are (adorably) boxy robots who assist their creator in his laboratory. Upon the completion of George's third and most human-like prototype yet, "J3," jealousy brews inside the laboratory.

"I set out to write a story about love," Rothery says. "What I actually created is about replacement. Jealousy just fit really well within the narrative."

From Moon to Archive, and many projects in between, Rothery demonstrates a taste for science fiction that eschews the clean lines and soft edges of Star Trek for the layers and hard edges of pulp novels and anime.

"I come from an art background," he says. "My original interest in science fiction was by my dad."

“I was always art first”

Mr. Rothery, Gavin's father, had shelves of paperback novels, and the young filmmaker would gaze at their covers. He imagined the stories those books told before he could actually read.

"I was always art first,'" Rothery says. "I'm all about the art because the art thinks for me. It's not just about the pretty picture. There's balance, composition, light volume. It snuck in and became my aesthetic."

But Archive's most charming characters, J1 and J2, take Rothery's love for art to the next level. Created by Rothery in 3D and brought to life by his art department, the robots of Archive were performed by ex-Cirque du Soleil performer Timea Kinga Maday (as J2) and Chris Schubert (as J1), who had built the costume of J1 himself.

"Any robot you see is an actor in costume," he says. "Even though I have a VFX background, working with practical film-making tools, I feel very happy in that space."

"I wanted to cast girls in all the suits because they're playing girls," Rother says. "But the J1 suit wasn't as mobile and flexible as we were promised. Chris was the only person that could walk in them. He had this technique down for how to move because he built it."

The robots gave Rothery headaches during filming, both out of fear that the actors would hurt themselves and because he only had one version of each costume. The first-time director looked to sci-fi legend George Lucas for inspiration on how to work with actors in clunky robot costumes.

"It's incredible how many times R2-D2 and C-3PO have fallen over," Rothery says.

The set's lighting, primarily made to light the film for cinematographer Laurie Rose, doubled as hazard lights to help the suit actors move around the set.

"We didn't have a fall. But that was my big worry during shooting," Rother says, adding that Archive's tiny budget also forced him to emulate the tricks of early science fiction filmmakers. "I've not been given $200 million to do anything. So I'm making films in the old school techniques of the '70s and '80s."

Archive's ending, explained

Warning: Spoilers for the end of Archive ahead.

Archive ends with a twist: It's not George's wife who died in the car accident, which takes place before the events of the movie. It was George who died, his solitary laboratory is a simulation that is running out of time. Jules is alive and well, raising their daughter in the real world.

"I really wanted to do something significant with the archives," Rothery says.

The original ending for Archive was, in fact, to reveal Jules' death and archival. But Rothery changed that to become the basis of the story rather than its twist ending. It was then that he came up with George's fate.

"Having [Jules] dead inside the archives is the first thing you think of for the ending," Rothery says. "I set myself the challenge of chucking away what would have been the big reveal too early in the film and still anchor around the archive in a significant way. You burn through the tropes and hopefully it leads to more interesting places."

Rothery offers audiences going into Archive for a second watch a clue to watch for. When J2 observes a painting of a geisha, it is foreshadowing who is actually dead. "The geisha is the last thing George sees as his life flashes before his eyes. You'll only get that at the end of the film when the archive burns down. Look for the geisha."

Archive is available now on Video on Demand.

This article was originally published on

The best sci-fi movie of 2020 was inspired by a computer meltdown (2024)

References

Top Articles
Where to watch Tell Me Your Secrets: stream every episode online
The shops are the new place to find love — and there's a supermarket dating code
LOST JEEPS • View forum
Aged Grimm Character Nyt Crossword
Craigslist The Big Island
Sessional Dates U Of T
Markz Blog
Celebrity Guest Tape Free
Craigslist In Lakeland
Nosetf
Cornell University Course Catalog
Craigslist Furniture By Owner Dallas
Accident On May River Road Today
Entegra Forum
Scrotal Support Walgreens
Terraria Melee Build Progression Guide & Best Class Loadouts
O'reilly's El Dorado Kansas
Craigslist Ludington Michigan
Craigslist Of Valdosta Georgia
Ice Quartz Osrs
Fajr Azan Time Today
Auto-Mataru
Proctor Motors In Lampasas
Tbom Retail Credit Card
Pcc Skilled Nursing Login
Course schedule | Fall 2022 | Office of the Registrar
Foreign Languages Building
Aunt Nettes Menu
Israel Tripadvisor Forum
Used Fuel Tanks For Sale Craigslist
Meet The Parents Putlocker
Classic Buttermilk Pancakes
How Did Laura Get Narally Pregnant
Roses Gordon Highway
Sound Of Freedom Showtimes Near Cinergy Midland
Raley Scrubs - Midtown
Sierra Vista Jail Mugshots
Cvs Newr.me
Roseberrys Obituaries
10 Teacher Tips to Encourage Self-Awareness in Teens | EVERFI
Henkels And Mccoy Pay Stub Portal
Beaufort Mugfaces Last 72 Hours
Alles, was ihr über Saison 03 von Call of Duty: Warzone 2.0 und Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II wissen müsst
What Is TAA Trade Agreements Act Compliance Trade Agreement Act Certification
Metroplus Rewards Sign In
Transactions on Computational Social Systems - IEEE SMC
Greenville Sc Greyhound
Noel Berry's Biography: Age, Height, Boyfriend, Family, Net Worth
19 BEST Stops on the Drive from Te Anau to Milford Sound +Road Trip Tips!
Stihl Bg55 Parts Diagram
Kernersville pastor arrested after police find weapons, body armor and fentanyl in his Las Vegas Hotel room
Jaggers Nutrition Menu
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kieth Sipes

Last Updated:

Views: 5810

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kieth Sipes

Birthday: 2001-04-14

Address: Suite 492 62479 Champlin Loop, South Catrice, MS 57271

Phone: +9663362133320

Job: District Sales Analyst

Hobby: Digital arts, Dance, Ghost hunting, Worldbuilding, Kayaking, Table tennis, 3D printing

Introduction: My name is Kieth Sipes, I am a zany, rich, courageous, powerful, faithful, jolly, excited person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.