AVARYA | Omeleto

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  • čas přidán 28. 01. 2021
  • An aging man sits alone in a spaceship after his robot overseer finds every planet uninhabitable.
    AVARYA is used with permission from Gokalp Gonen. Learn more at campsite.bio/gokalpgonen.
    An elderly man floats in a spaceship throughout the galaxy, with only a robot for a companion. The ship is arranged just like his favorite room on Earth, even down to the smallest dust particle, according to the robot. But the man is anxious to leave the ship for a bigger life. Together, they travel throughout the galaxy searching for a new habitable planet, since Earth has become uninhabitable.
    The robot, however, is sworn to keep humans from coming to harm. Every alternative planet discovered is not good enough for the man to live, according to the robot. But the man is tired of being stuck on the ship, no matter how comfortable it is. Desperate to leave, he rebels against his robot -- only to discover just how seriously the machine takes its charge to protect the man, even from himself.
    This visionary short animation -- written, directed and created by Turkish director Gokalp Gonen -- opens with Isaac Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics. Robots must not allow humans to come to harm, must protect their existence, and do not have to follow orders that would conflict with these directives. Asimov's rules have been the springboard for many other sci-fi stories. But rarely have they been explored with such sumptuous sense of visuals or flair for evocative atmospherics that makes for a genuinely mesmerizing cinematic experience.
    In a genre where either pristine minimalism or Victorian-influenced steampunk reign as the dominant visual style, the beautifully baroque and ornate art of AVARYA stands out. The ship's room has a rich, textured look reminiscent of Art Deco, with its books and antique furniture full of decorative flourishes. It could be any well-appointed library anywhere, but for the view of the space and planets outside the room.
    But the film's distinctive aesthetic is encapsulated in the singular look and feel of the robot, notable for its peacock-like "crown" or headdress, which flares in and out as it calculates and communicates with its charge. Combined with its cape-like torso, the robot evokes a courtier or seneschal in a foreign imperial court and all the obsequiousness and subterfuge it evokes.
    The robot is the other half of what's essentially a two-hander in the storytelling, and emerges as the primary obstacle for the man, who is beset with dreams and visions of the outside world. Though the pacing is meditative, enveloping viewers instead of pulling them along, the film never ceases to enchant the eye and evoke the sense of a darker mystery at work: the true nature of the robot and its mission, which has evolved from its original directive into something more sinister. In doing so, it has created a whole world -- one that becomes almost claustrophobic in its opulence and inhumane in its self-contained isolation.
    As a beautiful puzzle-box of a story, AVARYA is so packed with symbolism and ideas, with a core of enigmatic thought and feeling that requires multiple viewings to fully appreciate. Though its basic narrative through-line is simple enough to grasp when first watched, the storytelling works on a dreamlike, subconscious level -- much like it does for the main character -- with motifs and images that repeat with suggestive potential. And like a dream, the shape-shifting of visions can reassure or inspire us to keep striving for the larger impulses for home or truth. Or, if left unsatisfied, they can eventually turn terrifying in their ability to haunt us.
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 4,2K

  • @scorchedearth1451
    @scorchedearth1451 Před 3 lety +8219

    _"There's a small group. They're of your kind..."_
    Well, that was no lie.

    • @darkpaw1522
      @darkpaw1522 Před 3 lety +409

      Yeah, I noticed this when he asked, "human?" and the robot didn't answer.

    • @scorchedearth1451
      @scorchedearth1451 Před 3 lety +24

      @Hidan Kirito
      Thanks!

    • @Astr0dog1
      @Astr0dog1 Před 3 lety +33

      XD the robot was right

    • @nexusdrop7863
      @nexusdrop7863 Před 3 lety +47

      Kindness or horror.....

    • @WobblesandBean
      @WobblesandBean Před 3 lety +134

      That was a good twist. But I don't understand, what motive could the robot possibly have? Why do this again and again and again? It doesn't fulfill its promise at all, it's just wasting time. And if it knew this would be the inevitable result, why resist so strongly to letting him go down to Earth's surface?

  • @Steel_
    @Steel_ Před 3 lety +8509

    Probably the scariest type of robot, not one that's actively malicious, but one following its orders without ever budging, not knowing the orders are fundamentally flawed.

    • @suzukirider9030
      @suzukirider9030 Před 3 lety +580

      Yeah, read about "the paperclip maximizer". A robot initially programmed to maximize the production of paperclips at a paperclip manufacturing company.
      Thing is, it was never told when enough is enough and proceeded to overtake the entire planet's resources for this single purpose. It was also never told that killing humans that try to stop paperclip manufacturing was not allowed, so he saw them as malacious factors and did it's best to eliminate them.

    • @westernman7340
      @westernman7340 Před 3 lety +67

      @@suzukirider9030 When will that be a movie?

    • @janverbanck
      @janverbanck Před 3 lety +152

      To make a robot aware that orders are flawed, there must be either a set of inhibitions programmed (e. g. do not harm lifeforms) or it must have some AI conscience. Both are subject of restrictions...

    • @Synochra
      @Synochra Před 3 lety +29

      aka Germans

    • @bookworm_of_heaven
      @bookworm_of_heaven Před 3 lety +38

      @@Synochra as a german i can confirm

  • @slaymarie_rdh_ntraining
    @slaymarie_rdh_ntraining Před 2 lety +3129

    How did they manage to make 19 minutes feel like an hour. This was so amazing.

  • @deusexaethera
    @deusexaethera Před 2 lety +667

    "Never trust a computer you can't throw out a window." - Steve Wozniak

  • @triplepen
    @triplepen Před 3 lety +6753

    Hello! I am the director, let me know if you have any questions. Enjoy ! ^^ (Please use CZcams's subtitles, if you want a better vision and more language options)

    • @lucabanks6581
      @lucabanks6581 Před 3 lety +216

      I Wonder if the ship will ever break

    • @triplepen
      @triplepen Před 3 lety +507

      @@lucabanks6581 I don't think so. Robot probably will take care of it. It may even have a backup ship in somewhere else.

    • @le_epic_bodhi4004
      @le_epic_bodhi4004 Před 3 lety +38

      Bobux

    • @techlord5573
      @techlord5573 Před 3 lety +96

      Could the ship build a planet Or fix a damaged one and thank you for the short film.

    • @oldvlognewtricks
      @oldvlognewtricks Před 3 lety +92

      I love the design and the animation style. How long did the animation take to complete/how many people worked on it?

  • @ihateraymak2977
    @ihateraymak2977 Před 3 lety +2644

    As a turkish person I didn't realize they were speaking turkish for like 20 seconds because I was expecting English or sum East Asian languages for sum reason.

    • @cozmicpancakez7763
      @cozmicpancakez7763 Před 3 lety +154

      at first I thought it was German lmaoo

    • @benmitchell1182
      @benmitchell1182 Před 3 lety +68

      yeah i never realized how beautiful Turkish sounds lol (im a white American)

    • @ihateraymak2977
      @ihateraymak2977 Před 3 lety +34

      @@benmitchell1182 its okayish. The guy who did the voice over just had a nice voice

    • @MALIRIPPA
      @MALIRIPPA Před 3 lety +10

      lol im not turkish but i knew right away because i was raised around turkish people and know alot of them lol

    • @redblade8160
      @redblade8160 Před 3 lety +8

      @@benmitchell1182
      Saying that you are American is very broad and does not mean much; anyone can be an American and of any nationality, what of it?

  • @strikermodel
    @strikermodel Před 2 lety +1004

    The ending is bitter sweet. As soon as the robot said there are others down there "like you" I had a feeling it meant either replicates, or people in artificial bodies. Since they each act independently, and have their own independent minds and different experiences, overtime, they can become different individuals and eventually, form a type of complex society and life of their own. A new individual added every hundred or thousand years.

    • @ItsEdboy
      @ItsEdboy Před 5 měsíci +35

      If they’re independent why did they all do the exact same thing to lead them to that ending?

    • @rjbmarchiac8693
      @rjbmarchiac8693 Před 5 měsíci +77

      @@ItsEdboy Because they all react humanely after being reset into their quest for a new world, and then denied landing on a hundred worlds by the robot.

    • @strikermodel
      @strikermodel Před 5 měsíci +50

      @@ItsEdboy they all start out and end the journey the same way. The difference begins when they each arrive on earth at seperate intervals and interact with one another.

    • @iamme9138
      @iamme9138 Před 5 měsíci +14

      But the planet doesn't have any life on it, just more robots like him.

    • @iamme9138
      @iamme9138 Před 5 měsíci +2

      There is no place like home🤗

  • @lunatickgeo
    @lunatickgeo Před 2 lety +1622

    As much as I like both the story and the way it's told, I really must gush about the design of the ship and how it travels. It's so refreshingly new! It's not the slick, plasticky, almost sterile Star Trek or the chunky, exposed almost diesel-punk Star Wars look. It's futuristic art deco and I'm all for it.

    • @justthinking650
      @justthinking650 Před 2 lety +30

      agreed I've always wanted something different and unique or at the very least creative and it bugs me how that never happens in almost all sci fi tropes and instead sticks to the same plain and stale thruster spacecrafts and machinery

    • @roger7641
      @roger7641 Před 2 lety +70

      There was somehow sense that fabric of reality bent around the ship. Ship doesn't travel through vast emptiness, it stays still and universe around bends.

    • @heedmywarning2792
      @heedmywarning2792 Před 2 lety +12

      Reminds me of the magazine Heavy Metal.

    • @lunatickgeo
      @lunatickgeo Před 2 lety +2

      @@heedmywarning2792 oh yeah! good catch

    • @theinacircleoftheancientpu492
      @theinacircleoftheancientpu492 Před 2 lety +6

      Same here, it's truly awesome. Also it seems to be designed around the knowledge we currently have about FTL travel.

  • @cahidijoyoraharjo7833
    @cahidijoyoraharjo7833 Před 3 lety +3374

    This story is really dark! So the "group of humans" were bionic replicas of him?! That means they've done this over and over again, and it always ended the same way!

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB Před 3 lety +301

      Yeah. I’m wondering what the robot’s motivations are. If Earth isn’t inhabitable, why leave the old replicas there?? Why reset the search every time one leaves? I don’t get it.

    • @matildalair1236
      @matildalair1236 Před 3 lety +442

      @@DeathnoteBB It's motivation is to save the human, the replicas are not important to the AI. It doesn't seem to care about what it does, as long as it keeps his real human body alive and has one robo-him around to agree to continuation.

    • @kevinking1750
      @kevinking1750 Před 3 lety +353

      @@DeathnoteBB Its a logic error, like a printer stuck printing copies, its not conscious of its actions, it just executing the task. The robot will probably stop and sit there 'forever' until it breaks down, once it runs out of heads to reanimate.

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB Před 3 lety +84

      @@kevinking1750 But then why not just let the replicas go when they first ask?

    • @kevinking1750
      @kevinking1750 Před 3 lety +31

      @@DeathnoteBB Good point. I'll have to go back an watch again.

  • @jokerzbabe13
    @jokerzbabe13 Před 3 lety +1719

    When the Robot told him "they are the same kind as you," it didn't mean humans, it meant mechanical replica bodies exactly like the one he was in at that moment.

    • @krshna77
      @krshna77 Před 3 lety +49

      that is a lie by obscurity. or whatever is called legally.

    • @Christobanistan
      @Christobanistan Před 3 lety +11

      What? Reeeallly?

    • @jwadaow
      @jwadaow Před 3 lety +40

      @@krshna77 lie by omission.

    • @krshna77
      @krshna77 Před 3 lety +21

      @@jwadaow that's the usual term, but technically it's not an omission, just vagueness / intentional imprecision -- not sure what the correct phrase should be

    • @Shendue
      @Shendue Před 3 lety

      Yep.

  • @elenaruh2144
    @elenaruh2144 Před 3 lety +551

    If a video can make you feel trapped, alone and incapable of doing anything, it's this one. What a masterpiece

    • @user-hm5fj8fy4l
      @user-hm5fj8fy4l Před 5 měsíci +4

      Jeez, i have my life for this and i usually watch cartoons to forget about it... hehehe

  • @Rhacman
    @Rhacman Před 2 lety +1023

    I find it interesting that everyone assumes the robot is flawed or that the man even has a "real" body apart from the replicas. I'd like to consider that perhaps there are no humans left at all and that the robot seeking companionship and purpose is the architect of this entire endeavor including the man himself.

    • @EyeoIsis
      @EyeoIsis Před 2 lety +15

      Brilliant!

    • @NeoFryBoy
      @NeoFryBoy Před 2 lety +96

      The robot never lied once. It also stated that he had a real body.

    • @cherilynut
      @cherilynut Před 2 lety +10

      I LOVE your thinking, NICE!!!

    • @MI-eg2rd
      @MI-eg2rd Před 2 lety +60

      Why else would it be going on the same quest across the entire galaxy for an inhabitable planet AGAIN AND AGAIN, just to conclude it with dumping one replica off on earth and then pretending it doesn't know whether there is an inhabitable planet in the galaxy...

    • @Hakajin
      @Hakajin Před 2 lety +24

      That's an interesting interpretation. The robot can only exist while it has a purpose.

  • @-dew82-96
    @-dew82-96 Před 3 lety +3979

    He must be a scientist, designed all this and making him a prisoner of his own device...at least the robot is loyal...

    • @CZ350tuner
      @CZ350tuner Před 3 lety +76

      A similar fate to character in an episode of Space 1999.

    • @williamkowalchik572
      @williamkowalchik572 Před 3 lety +88

      You can checkout anytime you like, you just can't leave.

    • @kenetickups6146
      @kenetickups6146 Před 3 lety +13

      Wow man so deep

    • @akiakiii5879
      @akiakiii5879 Před 3 lety +11

      I don't think he made the robot.

    • @Zach2Wheels
      @Zach2Wheels Před 3 lety +16

      The Robot inferred he found him on the planet

  • @Fayanora
    @Fayanora Před 3 lety +3939

    I'd be like "I don't want perfect, I just want adequate. I'll adapt. That's what humans do, we adapt."

    • @RequiemPoete
      @RequiemPoete Před 3 lety +321

      Unfortunately the AI was told to disobey orders that posed risk to it's charge.

    • @yetusthatfeetus
      @yetusthatfeetus Před 3 lety +86

      I would just break the robot once it got me to a suitable place.

    • @asaptrippy
      @asaptrippy Před 3 lety +177

      @@yetusthatfeetus I'm pretty sure the robot controls the ship so I think you'll be just stuck there

    • @nathanex5122
      @nathanex5122 Před 3 lety +89

      @@asaptrippy or it rebuilds itself (just like his body)

    • @babberdydabberdy3551
      @babberdydabberdy3551 Před 3 lety +37

      I would ask the robot to come with me to ensure my safety on the new planet

  • @Chestnutcow
    @Chestnutcow Před 3 lety +346

    There’s something so haunting about robots that outwardly have your best interest, and even more, have some sort of authority over you.
    Robots that attack and act all grrrr, I’m just like, “ehh..” but robots like this one really hit different. It’s odd, yet fascinating.

    • @GuyReactsChannel
      @GuyReactsChannel Před rokem +18

      We already seeing this with how annoying chatgpt is whenever you ask it to do something that is not what the original creators intended. Any prompt with a little bit of NSFW is restricted, or things that are not really NSFW get restricted and you can't do anything. So many people are coming up with creative prompts to trick the AI.

    • @alexanderg1935
      @alexanderg1935 Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@GuyReactsChannelTouch grass.

    • @DouglasRadzanowskiJr
      @DouglasRadzanowskiJr Před 5 měsíci +3

      The same applies to politicians.

    • @KaygeeFromNanotrasen
      @KaygeeFromNanotrasen Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@alexanderg1935why are you booing him? Hes right

  • @Shendue
    @Shendue Před 3 lety +438

    The voice acting seems excellent. I can't understand Turkish, but the inflection and expressed emotion is amazing.

    • @mcankaka
      @mcankaka Před 2 lety +9

      Don’t worry sometimes i can’t understand also when old peoples talking:D (yeap, i’m turkish)

    • @Agent44996
      @Agent44996 Před 2 lety +8

      Lol I thought it was Danish or something 😂😂

    • @Brave_Sir_Robin
      @Brave_Sir_Robin Před 2 lety +4

      I thought it was German

    • @stanislavstoimenov1729
      @stanislavstoimenov1729 Před 2 lety

      @@Brave_Sir_Robin Only an American or an Australian will confuse an Indo-European language with a Turkic one.😗
      How is it possible that you're so weak as linguists?

    • @Brave_Sir_Robin
      @Brave_Sir_Robin Před 2 lety +5

      @@stanislavstoimenov1729 while I am an American (unfortunately) I do generally consider my self to be smarter than most of my countrymen and women. And also it’s not just Americans that aren’t entirely familiar with every language out there. I’m sure a Mexican, or Asian would be just as unfamiliar with most European languages as some Americans. I did make a mistake here, which I am deeply embarrassed by. At least I had the bravery to say that i Made a mistake.

  • @jaredfischer8883
    @jaredfischer8883 Před 3 lety +2435

    This is just the backstory to supreme leader Snoke.

  • @maxithalo7796
    @maxithalo7796 Před 3 lety +653

    I love how this story drops you off in the middle of it, no need to explain stuff with long narrations or backstories, you just see an oldman, space, a robot, and everything just starts to make sense as you watch it

    • @krshna77
      @krshna77 Před 3 lety +10

      agreed. spoonfeeding contextual chickensoup is only acceptable for elementary school readers.

    • @dopaminecloud
      @dopaminecloud Před 2 lety +4

      @@krshna77 I wish game writers got this memo already.

  • @o__o.6212
    @o__o.6212 Před 10 měsíci +175

    This take on future technology is incredible. The transport's method of travel isn't slick, smooth, shining-white and soundless, like some perfected version of our modern spaceships. No, it travels on a geometric wave, in a rotating spherical we can barely even comprehend as a ship. It really feels like some future so distant we can barely make sense out of it. Like how a medieval knight would feel trying to look at an airplane, seeing a contraption that bears recognizable parts, and yet taken as a whole teeters on the edge of impossible. And of course, everything just looks absolutely beautiful and artistic in design, and that itself fits with the implication that everything the man sees has been gilded into pretty shapes in an attempt to make everything perfect for him.

    • @whywasacornnamedafteracorn7613
      @whywasacornnamedafteracorn7613 Před 5 měsíci

      I thought the ship was just swapping through pictures as we dont see movement and the planets always stay the same

    • @lilyschrodingy3600
      @lilyschrodingy3600 Před 5 měsíci +8

      @@whywasacornnamedafteracorn7613 More likely the thing is manipulating the fabric of spacetime as a whole, hence the bubble-like effect.

    • @jabberwocky1707
      @jabberwocky1707 Před 5 měsíci

      It reminds me of the 'style' of _'The Fifth Element'_ movie.

  • @Alteori
    @Alteori Před 2 lety +402

    Somebody messed up the programming 😄 I absolutely loved this one

  • @MisterDaviso452
    @MisterDaviso452 Před 3 lety +1497

    This film contains the essence of sci-fi for me. Real human struggles through the lends of futuristic technology leading to a downward spiral before giving a brief glimpse of hope but ultimately ending with a mixed feeling of wonder, confusion, and catharsis.

  • @tassadro
    @tassadro Před 3 lety +1732

    the sad part is the robot knows there is no world that matches its ideal's and yet is forever following its directive to find one. knowing it will never finish. I wonder how many of that man will be places on earth. how many eons will that take!?

    • @kriza891
      @kriza891 Před 3 lety +180

      Robot is trying to validate its existance which is pointless once the guy stops traveling. So it keeps itself alive by keeping the search.

    • @emeraldmorningmist
      @emeraldmorningmist Před 3 lety +88

      And why not expand the search to other galaxies? Maybe the ship can't handle the distance between them. The robot did mention it needed to resupply somehow at one point.

    • @Cyberium
      @Cyberium Před 3 lety +77

      Every planet changes over time. One day, on its eternal journey, the robot will find a previous planet becoming suitable.

    • @matildalair1236
      @matildalair1236 Před 3 lety +139

      @@Cyberium The problem was that the robot didn't even consider Earth's environment as suitable. It wouldn't allowing anything less safe than the controlled environment of the ship itself. It will never find perfection in nature or a more safe environment than the ship.

    • @Cyberium
      @Cyberium Před 3 lety +90

      ​@@matildalair1236 In a sense, the robot isn't wrong. There's no such thing as perfection in science and number, and because the robot is a product of science and math it will never find perfection.
      It didn't understand that humans require flaws to live happily.

  • @falcychead8198
    @falcychead8198 Před 2 lety +399

    Pretty rookie programming mistake. You should never set parameters to a specific value, but rather a condition is met when it falls within a certain range. If you build a thermostat, for instance, that turns on heating or cooling when the temperature is below or above _exactly_ 20 degrees, you end up wildly alternating between the heating and the cooling. You set it so the cooling turns on when it is a couple of degrees above 20, and heating when it is a couple of degrees below. Thus you have a stable system.

    • @toadmanfrogmanold
      @toadmanfrogmanold Před 2 lety +75

      dude your anonymous pfp makes this even more of a professional redditor moment

    • @wobbuchu9019
      @wobbuchu9019 Před 2 lety +26

      Indeed. I love to think about all the flaws and paradoxes these laws of robotics create. I love the fact that this book (the book that "made" these laws of robotics, I robot by Isaac Asimov, definitely worth the read, I can't recommend it enough) was published in 1950, it's a totally different idea of technology and future than what we have now, a much more mysterious and ominous one, idealized by people that had little to no idea about how computers actually work. Like, the whole idea of this artificial intelligence is so ominous and different than what we know today, because it was created in a different setting.
      I don't know, all of this is really cool to me, just that lol

    • @toadmanfrogmanold
      @toadmanfrogmanold Před 2 lety +11

      @@wobbuchu9019 man this is a redditor convention here

    • @awakatilluminado6129
      @awakatilluminado6129 Před 2 lety +15

      I agree, i was thinking the same thing as i watched. And unfortunate hell-making mistake in this case. Ik the story is not about this lol but i am curious what the thought process was when he was creating the robot/ship system. Why would he think having such specific parameters and having no failsafe would be okay. Yes the universe is infinitely expanding (and thus perhaps in a few billion more iterations there can be a planet to fit the parameters). But it's just silly to make such rigid values, especially when i mean clearly humans have capabilities to survive a range of atmospheric differences (I'm thinking even just sea level to high altitudes).
      Additionally Im curious as to why he failed to consider mental health as an aspect. I viewed it as a commentary (unintentionally or not) at how humans often disregard mental health when considering the overall health of a person, and clearly this results in severe long term consequences

    • @inpursuitofhappiness4873
      @inpursuitofhappiness4873 Před 2 lety +4

      Eeyyep. A fatal flaw :P
      Clark solved that problem elegantly. HAL, who was also a very, very polite abuser, couldn't justify deferring to the safety of the humans in its care because it couldn't resolve the conflicting orders he was given.

  • @danb.3397
    @danb.3397 Před 2 lety +100

    ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT ! So rare to find an opening, a story with imaginative artistry AND an ending ! I have watched hundreds of these and this one is maybe the best.

  • @leslees7476
    @leslees7476 Před 3 lety +587

    Just when you thought you’ve seen every idea possible for robot design, along comes an art deco-inspired robot! Absolutely genius!

    • @yes78
      @yes78 Před 3 lety +6

      I dont think that is it, each irteration doesnt know ưhat the last did so they couldnt have learnt, i think the main point is just existential dread

    • @giovanna722
      @giovanna722 Před 3 lety +12

      Lesley Sogi I haven't studied robot design much, but this certainly is beautiful. Love the peacock tail.

    • @madelinegutierrez1720
      @madelinegutierrez1720 Před 3 lety +3

      It is a lovely form to design if you were creating something you'd "interface" with - and the art deconess suited the nostalgia of the leather bound books and buttoned sofa 🛋 📚

    • @daniellepaige1249
      @daniellepaige1249 Před 3 lety +1

      It looks similar in design to the Vex species of robots from the game Destiny

    • @boringNW
      @boringNW Před 3 lety +1

      There was a miniatures game that had a lot of well designed robots in a similar theme. Warmachine Convergence of Cyriss

  • @Nettsinthewoods
    @Nettsinthewoods Před 3 lety +2683

    What a horrible predicament. I love the robot, it’s really beautiful and imaginative. What a beautiful film. Thank you

    • @jaybingham3711
      @jaybingham3711 Před 3 lety +63

      Yet this is what so many ill-informed people clamor for as they dream and fantasize about immortality. They're not well-read enough to know that their dream is actually the worst kind of nightmare.

    • @TwoStacks217
      @TwoStacks217 Před 3 lety +31

      Einstein said that we create our own heavens and hells through our own wants and desires the scientists created the Robot which is actually the devil and the spaceship is his own personal hell but yet he is convinced himself that he's in search of heaven

    • @Deto128
      @Deto128 Před 3 lety +10

      @@jaybingham3711 Is it worse than the alternative? Than oblivion? I don't think that anyone can conclusively say that.

    • @jaybingham3711
      @jaybingham3711 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Deto128 Try commenting on the eons of oblivion that preceded your birth. Exactly how horrible was that?

    • @Deto128
      @Deto128 Před 3 lety +6

      @@jaybingham3711 That had an end to it. What will it be like not having an end?

  • @ramsesbams
    @ramsesbams Před 2 lety +33

    "they look like you" was a lot more literal than expected

    • @mahlawn2808
      @mahlawn2808 Před 2 lety +4

      Notice how when he asks if they're human, the robot doesn't answer.

  • @Abelhawk
    @Abelhawk Před 2 lety +43

    I really liked the space "ship" vehicle. It traveled in such a unique way, covering distance and time in a much more unconventional way than most movies depict. A chilling film that was very well done.

  • @bleflar9183
    @bleflar9183 Před 3 lety +3397

    Eventually, if enough copies of this man are amassed they can make their own civilisation.

    • @pixynowwithevenmorebelkanb6965
      @pixynowwithevenmorebelkanb6965 Před 3 lety +310

      YES THE OLD MAN CIV

    • @Dakarai_Knight
      @Dakarai_Knight Před 3 lety +471

      And perhaps modify the planet enough for it to be ideal for the robot. Enough for it to restore his original body and end the journey. But it'd take an eternity...

    • @sarahoshea9603
      @sarahoshea9603 Před 3 lety +76

      Perhaps even overtake the ship

    • @arthurjeremypearson
      @arthurjeremypearson Před 3 lety +121

      Or, enough copies are created to create a layer of copies 50 feet deep, all still alive, immortal, unable to die.

    • @bleflar9183
      @bleflar9183 Před 3 lety +95

      @@arthurjeremypearson Im pretty sure that earth will get devoured by the sun before that would happen.

  • @August222
    @August222 Před 3 lety +767

    This film is a gem. Most science fiction is a big let down: same old, tired concepts and dilemmas. Avarya, however, constantly surprises and delights throughout its very short length. I hope the person who wrote this is provided every want and need required to make long films. A truly creative spirit.

    • @enderman5423
      @enderman5423 Před 3 lety +3

      Ray bradbury

    • @tomster7574
      @tomster7574 Před 3 lety +19

      this is an old story concept written and filmed many times before. glad you liked it but its far from original. every generation comes across old stories in their own time thinking its new. it is, to them.

    • @davecalf9155
      @davecalf9155 Před 3 lety +9

      Oh wow. I’ve never encountered it after decades of reading sci-fi. What was the first iteration?

    • @enderman5423
      @enderman5423 Před 3 lety

      @@davecalf9155 idk

    • @davecalf9155
      @davecalf9155 Před 3 lety

      @tom ster Give me your list of films.

  • @brandonhamilton833
    @brandonhamilton833 Před 2 lety +31

    I feel sorrow for the robot more than i do the man. She knows what is going on and has been doing it for millions of years. She sounds so defeated.

    • @Lumberjack_king
      @Lumberjack_king Před rokem +1

      Ah what?! You are weird I mean I kinda get it but still

    • @brandonhamilton833
      @brandonhamilton833 Před rokem

      @@Lumberjack_king very weird my internet friend. Lol

    • @Lumberjack_king
      @Lumberjack_king Před rokem

      Yeah

    • @TheRedMooncorp
      @TheRedMooncorp Před 4 měsíci +2

      I am not sure if the robot feels this way, but I find great sympathy in you empathising with the robot.

  • @eniemeuful
    @eniemeuful Před rokem +31

    I have watched this several times now. Nearly every four months or six, I come to rewatch it. These are the kind of themes I want my sci-do movies to explore. Themes of human consciousness and existence.
    So, perfectly executed!

    • @TheBayStar
      @TheBayStar Před 7 měsíci

      I know right! Sci-fi is wonderful to explore the concepts of human consciousness and what do they do, as technology gets better and better to the point humans have more time to wonder about consciousness, is it worth to extend it, can it be transferred, and even if it seems successful- is it truly?

  • @cfox7811
    @cfox7811 Před 3 lety +945

    this story was worthy of the original Twilight Zone series. well done.

  • @mysteriousmaker1733
    @mysteriousmaker1733 Před 3 lety +3346

    This story embodies the true meaning of insanity. The robot can look over and over again. Looking for perfection in the exact same places over and over and over; again and again and again. Same song. Same dance. Same story. Same outcome. Nothing will change. He and the robot will never find the perfect planet because it doesn’t exist. Until the robot realizes that, which means never because most robots don’t see what humans do, the mission will never cease. This man’s true body will never be set free.

    • @Goldenhashbrowns
      @Goldenhashbrowns Před 3 lety +96

      well, until the earth is full of the replicas .am i right/

    • @mysteriousmaker1733
      @mysteriousmaker1733 Před 3 lety +79

      @@Goldenhashbrowns. I think it would keep on going. Even after that. Overpopulation

    • @Goldenhashbrowns
      @Goldenhashbrowns Před 3 lety +15

      @@mysteriousmaker1733 ohh boy

    • @blazeaglory
      @blazeaglory Před 3 lety +17

      It depends on the parameters of its programming.

    • @retroman0000
      @retroman0000 Před 3 lety +110

      I'm pretty certain the robot knows full well that there aren't any planets that fit its criteria. It's not expecting to find one all of a sudden, it's determined this is the best way to keep the man on the ship.

  • @tedwintheslyfox9382
    @tedwintheslyfox9382 Před 2 lety +12

    9:35 "Find me some place, Robot!" "that place is here, sir."
    its ironic how something that you really wanted the most is also something that you're gonna regret having.

  • @Amanoob105
    @Amanoob105 Před 3 lety +13

    The robot mentions that his "real body is safe", presumably stored in some form of stasis on the ship itself. So by leaving copies of himself on one planet this could lead to him finding a way to free himself in the long run.
    A very, very, very long run indeed but he does have in effect functional immortality so time is something he clearly has as shown by all the other hims that have been on that planet for hundreds if not thousands of years.

  • @DaNargh42
    @DaNargh42 Před 3 lety +2197

    "After the death of Gromit, Wallace's final invention proves to be his eternal undoing"

  • @sebastiandrews4816
    @sebastiandrews4816 Před 3 lety +334

    That’s what an emergency off switch is for

    • @verryberryman7655
      @verryberryman7655 Před 3 lety +56

      And why dr.doofensmertz is the best scientist

    • @realyty4real
      @realyty4real Před 3 lety +52

      Had he named this machine "the planet finderinator" then the robot would've found the sun habitable.

    • @majinvegeta3284
      @majinvegeta3284 Před 3 lety +15

      @@verryberryman7655
      doo-bee doo-bee doo-bah
      doo-bee doo-bee doo-bah
      doo-bee doo-bee doo-bah
      doo-bee doo-bee doo-bah

    • @verryberryman7655
      @verryberryman7655 Před 3 lety +8

      @@majinvegeta3284 he's a semi aquatic egg laying mammal of action!

    • @rhianngacusan1227
      @rhianngacusan1227 Před 3 lety +1

      sacrament of death

  • @goldenfloof5469
    @goldenfloof5469 Před rokem +9

    Imagine being stuck on a spaceship for a practical eternity just because you forgot to put tolerances into the requirements.

  • @Drew-ec1nd
    @Drew-ec1nd Před 3 lety +33

    I feel like this represents life in a way. People always strive to do better in terms of work and as a result end up suffering. The better idea would be to simple be contempt with what you have and learn to accept that nothing is perfect and that's how you'll be the most fulfilled.

    • @wolfrainexxx
      @wolfrainexxx Před 2 lety +3

      Trust me, many of us live in contempt of existence, not because we're in poverty.

    • @njclondon2009
      @njclondon2009 Před rokem

      whilst i understand the point you are making in the context of the film we just saw, your advice is hardly a tagline for human progress.

  • @zenekragdoll8064
    @zenekragdoll8064 Před 3 lety +680

    I can't explain, but turkish is so fitting for this robot

    • @lardlover3730
      @lardlover3730 Před 2 lety +1

      It’s kinda lime the trash ship from pikmin 2

    • @AlexAnder-rv1gu
      @AlexAnder-rv1gu Před 2 lety +19

      The parody is regardless of nationality or race, it's about covidity and the robot-like limited intelligence of covidians

    • @shoeofobama6091
      @shoeofobama6091 Před 2 lety +1

      thats true

    • @fizkallnyeilsem
      @fizkallnyeilsem Před 2 lety +2

      Why because Turkey is hell?

  • @squidking191
    @squidking191 Před 3 lety +694

    Man wallace really lost it when grommit died.

  • @floorcat7985
    @floorcat7985 Před 3 lety +19

    The scary part is that they all have to live on earth forever without skipping time

  • @notbloodylikely4817
    @notbloodylikely4817 Před 2 lety +35

    Very well animated but the story was also executed so well. The way the robot reloads the gun and resets the grid of planets was excellent foreshadowing of the twist at the end. Really loved the whole thing, including the philosophy. Be careful what you wish for because you might just get it.

  • @FroggiJoy
    @FroggiJoy Před 3 lety +1244

    "Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.” -Arthur C Clarke.

    • @lvlc6023
      @lvlc6023 Před 3 lety +2

      They should have detect us a long time ago now.

    • @ivanlagrana878
      @ivanlagrana878 Před 3 lety +21

      @@lvlc6023 or maybe we will do it first.

    • @guscfer157
      @guscfer157 Před 3 lety +42

      ​@@lvlc6023 You have literally not a single objective reason to believe that.

    • @lvlc6023
      @lvlc6023 Před 3 lety +2

      @@guscfer157 If they are intelligent and more evolved. They should have detect us. But no one is out there.

    • @guscfer157
      @guscfer157 Před 3 lety +41

      @@lvlc6023 What if they detected us but just decided not to communicate? What if they don't want to interact with us at all in the first place? What if they are primitive or don't use the same means we do for communication. Radio signals are a very sophisticated and also very specific method of communication, how hard is it to accept the possibility that they just don't use this sort of technology?

  • @johnortiz6129
    @johnortiz6129 Před 3 lety +3221

    Why didnt he just say, "this ship is harming me. The confinement is making me depressed, the planet would heal me" the robot seems capable of negotiating

    • @Josuh
      @Josuh Před 3 lety +596

      2:06 the robot just plain ignored him

    • @anniebananie8224
      @anniebananie8224 Před 3 lety +637

      He knew the robot did not understand mental health. That's why he just made one small comment about it.

    • @lynnrobinson8885
      @lynnrobinson8885 Před 3 lety +31

      Catch 22...😕

    • @Jimraynor45
      @Jimraynor45 Před 2 lety +132

      We actually don't know what the robot is capable of. From what we saw, it is just blindly following orders. It can't think for itself, it will always just follow the orders.

    • @ayaanmirza1677
      @ayaanmirza1677 Před 2 lety +100

      I think the robot would ignore him because it does not register feelings, only physical health

  • @planet0fbeauty
    @planet0fbeauty Před 9 měsíci +18

    What I personally learn from this animation is that the suitable place for us may not necessarily be the place where we belong. Just like Einstein quote " A ship is always safe at the shore but that is not what it is built for ". I love this animation ❤

    • @submanstan7488
      @submanstan7488 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Yes, beautiful film and great idea.
      (PS Not an Einstein quote, attributed to John A. Shedd.)

    • @Sanquinity
      @Sanquinity Před 4 měsíci +3

      It also tells us that an adversary doesn't necessarily have to be evil. They can be 100% genuine and well-intentioned, yet still do wrong by you.

  • @AlexeyFilippenkoPlummet
    @AlexeyFilippenkoPlummet Před 4 měsíci +3

    I like how the ship wormhole travel is shown with space-time being bent around the ship. Not like just some 'cloud of gas' we accustomed to or something alike that's relatively slowly bending, but everything around is like an event horizon. Beautiful design.

  • @ShustnovikGaming
    @ShustnovikGaming Před 3 lety +2225

    Ok, that ending is DARK. He comes down to Earth, only to find that the last group remaining are all replicas of him, and then, his restored body leaves Earth, indicating that he had the same idea, and that they did the same journey over, and over, and over. Yikes

    • @unripetheberrby6283
      @unripetheberrby6283 Před 3 lety +223

      And actually, since those past versions of him, and the recent one are all of his old sickly self, that must really mean his original self HAD died at that old age; and all the replicas are of him how he looked as/after he passed away! Made by the robot, for some reason.

    • @tristanbabuyo1935
      @tristanbabuyo1935 Před 3 lety +10

      @@unripetheberrby6283 🙂 nice

    • @dewinmoonl
      @dewinmoonl Před 3 lety +95

      that's what happens when you forgot the exit condition to a loop xD

    • @blazeaglory
      @blazeaglory Před 3 lety +10

      Yeah and why was one of them wearing a woman's wig and a dress?

    • @tinfoilhomer1535
      @tinfoilhomer1535 Před 3 lety +19

      @@blazeaglory watch the smurfs and find out

  • @ianmacfarlane1241
    @ianmacfarlane1241 Před 3 lety +1152

    A horrible predicament, but a beautifully animated story.

    • @johnl.7754
      @johnl.7754 Před 3 lety +18

      Yeah but sort of remind me of the current COVID lockdown in that want to go outside and interact with the world but know that less risk staying indoors.

    • @ianmacfarlane1241
      @ianmacfarlane1241 Před 3 lety +19

      @@johnl.7754 That's exactly what came to mind as I was watching.
      There are vast numbers of people who feel trapped by this situation.
      There's a growing sense of despair for everyone & knowing that we're collectively doing the right thing only goes so far.
      It's been truly horrible for so many different demographics - the very young missing out on social development - school age kids missing out on their education - older teenagers and young adults missing out on a social life, the elderly missing out on family contact...possibly any contact - everyone is struggling, and this short film perfectly illustrates the need for human contact.

    • @RyujinSaviorX
      @RyujinSaviorX Před 3 lety +4

      @@ianmacfarlane1241 yes indeed

  • @cabdifataaxmuxumedcabdi3609
    @cabdifataaxmuxumedcabdi3609 Před 7 měsíci +2

    the Turkish language is so beautiful, The Turkish short film is a beautiful and thought-provoking film with a nice ending. Some people have commented on how the robot is following its orders to the teeth even though they are flawed. I agree that the robot is following its orders to the teeth, but I also see it as preparing the clone to appreciate Earth when he comes back to it. The robot wants the clone to accept the fact that he is a clone, a robot, and that life was worth living even though he is a clone of himself. This is the reason why the robot is reloading the gun, to prepare the next clone for the same realization.
    In other words, the robot is not simply following its orders blindly. It is trying to help the clone to understand and appreciate the value of life, even though it is a clone life.

  • @TheJacklwilliams
    @TheJacklwilliams Před 2 lety +5

    I think, it's equally enjoyable after a movie such as this, to read through the comments to get peoples take on the film. It's like going to a movie with a few hundred others than having cocktails/food afterwards and openly discussing it. Very cool. Sometimes I stay for awhile and read through many, sometimes leave early due to other committments. Either way I always enjoy that aspect especially after a well written piece such as this. Once again, thanks Alan, good one. Thanks to the creator(s) as well. My take on this one is simple though I enjoyed everyones perspective. I believe this film encapsulates what it feels like to grow old beyond most years and be left, with yourself. My Grandmother lived to 98. She buried two husbands, countless kids, grandkids and watched all of her friends in life pass on. Though it's natural, part of the human condition to move forward and hang on for another day and innately born into us the journey comes with a price. In the end, we are left, with ourselves.

  • @bobbygalyon5580
    @bobbygalyon5580 Před 3 lety +724

    Hes so eager to get off the ship for temporary happiness, sure he gets a different scenery which will enlighten him for awhile but as humans we need relationships either romantic or platonic. Soon enough that suitable planet will feel just as if nothing changed and he just simply stuck on a bigger spaceship(planet). Its not him being stuck on a spaceship that's really the problem, the bigger problem is hes stuck on a spaceship by himself.

    • @friedegg3732
      @friedegg3732 Před 3 lety +38

      well human interaction also gets tiresome after long enough

    • @enderman5423
      @enderman5423 Před 3 lety +21

      @@friedegg3732 as an introvert I can confirm

    • @nexusdrop7863
      @nexusdrop7863 Před 3 lety +12

      Nah, he (they) will either end up building something or there being so many bodies he crawls into space.

    • @Minyassa
      @Minyassa Před 3 lety +18

      If we spend enough time away from the same people and have different experiences we eventually become different people. I think long vacations away from the group would help diversify them and make them unique individuals, and if they cannot die of age then perhaps it would be enough to spark different mental evolutions and different lines of creativity.

    • @zz7073
      @zz7073 Před 3 lety +12

      A human would be happier on a planet to explore instead of caged on a ship with nothing to do.

  • @DeputyCartman100
    @DeputyCartman100 Před 3 lety +652

    The lifeboat has become a prison and the lifeguard a warden.

    • @geoben1810
      @geoben1810 Před 3 lety +8

      @ DeputyCartman
      Exactly. He himself created the robot and his search for the perfect habitat. He's become a prisoner of his device. 😲

    • @giovanna722
      @giovanna722 Před 3 lety +7

      @@geoben1810 Why would a scientist create a robot that had final say over him? Shouldn't there have been a way for him to override the robot?

    • @greedybaron6042
      @greedybaron6042 Před 3 lety +10

      @@giovanna722
      All it would need is logical conclusion. If the creator never gave it an absolute to obey, but rather to find, it would logically override the creator's wishes unless it coincided with it's programmed logic.
      Logic: Find ideal location. If True: Accept. If False: Deny.
      Creator issues command to a non-ideal planet: False.

    • @greedybaron6042
      @greedybaron6042 Před 3 lety +8

      @@giovanna722 The fault is in the creator, not the creation

    • @Lugh444
      @Lugh444 Před 3 lety +2

      Beaches have lifeguards, lifeboats are those things on the side of a ship. 🧐

  • @mysteryfool
    @mysteryfool Před 4 měsíci +3

    Probably the best short film i have seen in forever

  • @suleymanbayram1639
    @suleymanbayram1639 Před rokem +7

    Böyle bir eserin Türkler tarafından yapıldığını görünce evde çığlığı bastım yemin ederim. Muazzam olmuş, baştan beri seslendirme ne alaka ya? diyordum ama yapımcıları görünce anladım nedenini. Çok teşekkür ederim böyle bir eser için.

  • @micahturpin8042
    @micahturpin8042 Před 3 lety +263

    Ok, everybody's talking about the beauty of the animation, the absolutely amazing writing, the totally unexpected plot twist, etc, etc. What I don't see anybody talking about is the absolute genius that is the set of stairs. That's the best part of this film, in my opinion. The simple pleasures in life, if you know what I mean.

    • @madelinegutierrez1720
      @madelinegutierrez1720 Před 3 lety +8

      Right?! The stairs were something but I need a moving handrail as well. I hate stairs without a handrail.

    • @katjerouac
      @katjerouac Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah but if they slid up why couldn't they just slide down??

    • @guymontag4470
      @guymontag4470 Před 3 lety +10

      My immediate thought when I saw those stairs was just how impractical they were. Sure they’re cool but they serve no other purpose than just to be cool. You could just have regular ass stairs. Maybe if whoever built this spent less time on those damn stairs and more time on programming your artificial intelligence, he wouldn’t be in this mess.

    • @goatcheesewheel12345
      @goatcheesewheel12345 Před 3 lety

      You've got a point, the movement and the coloration is very unique

    • @wannabefoleyartist9635
      @wannabefoleyartist9635 Před 3 lety +3

      @@guymontag4470 in my mind the stairs are probably made that way for practical purposes. Sure they look cool but they also take up way less space then a ramp or a all of the steps that have to be slid outwards from an unknown compartment.

  • @goatcheesewheel12345
    @goatcheesewheel12345 Před 3 lety +1315

    I really like the technology depicted in the video. It's got the coloration, shapes, and building material choice of something out of an old yet innovative era, yet the architecture of the entire ship maintains the science fiction mindset. I had a hard time describing this.

  • @koushal8798
    @koushal8798 Před 2 měsíci

    "Health is more than just a functioning body, robot." truly a quote to live by!!

  • @psykloz
    @psykloz Před rokem +20

    A very thoughtful story about the urge to seek perfection. The machine was worry about physical integrity but didn't know that mental health was also a point to considerate. The confinement was so opressing that the man wanted to take his life himself. A curious fact is that this short was made before Covid!

  • @moniviphousetphann3146
    @moniviphousetphann3146 Před 3 lety +1876

    Oh mannn the voice acting is so good even if it's not in English I can feel every word. Phenomenal work.

    • @mehmetbilgin2101
      @mehmetbilgin2101 Před 2 lety +66

      Thank you for your comment, I was going crazy. The subtitles are English but the voice is Turkish

    • @hasankeskin5562
      @hasankeskin5562 Před 2 lety +18

      @@mehmetbilgin2101 Im very suprised at the start,"türkçe mi la bu 😮"

    • @hasankeskin5562
      @hasankeskin5562 Před 2 lety

      @Zekron102 :)

    • @badoww4921
      @badoww4921 Před 2 lety +2

      lol i remember it in english!

    • @vicsar
      @vicsar Před 8 měsíci +1

      Yes! That's what I like my anime subbed.

  • @erikafreebird6449
    @erikafreebird6449 Před 3 lety +299

    This film mirrors how humans never learn from history, but keep repeating it...very well done, but gives one a feeling of doom.

    • @hubb3498
      @hubb3498 Před 3 lety +5

      Subtract the in from infinite and repetition comes to an end.

    • @nexusdrop7863
      @nexusdrop7863 Před 3 lety +4

      No, it is about the orders being followed. The prime order is to preserve his live, above ALL others. This causes the robot to disobey an order that risks his life, even just a little. There can never be zero risk so the robot must guard him forever. Even following his order (to release him) the robot STILL keeps him alive above all else. Addressing laws 1 and 2.

    • @erikafreebird6449
      @erikafreebird6449 Před 3 lety +3

      @@nexusdrop7863 yes..I get that..my point is how the man instinctively, keeps repeating the same pattern. The robot is doing what he was designed to do perfectly, it's the human that appears flawed.

    • @nexusdrop7863
      @nexusdrop7863 Před 3 lety +1

      @@erikafreebird6449 I can agree to that.

    • @friedegg3732
      @friedegg3732 Před 3 lety

      there is no history to learn from though? the whole point is that he thinks its all just starting everytime, if anything this is more so detwrminism since he keeps doing the same thing

  • @trogdortheburninator3621
    @trogdortheburninator3621 Před 2 lety +2

    Bravo for this short. It's been ages since I have seen anything so just deep psych thought stiring. Simply beautiful and tragic.

  • @Lofhaa
    @Lofhaa Před 2 lety +20

    Is it me or is Turkish the best language option for the robot? I mean it sounds awesome, like some sort of fantasy elf language.

  • @Garbinge
    @Garbinge Před 3 lety +170

    This is something I could easily see on the Twilight Zone or Black Mirror, just an absolutely amazing story with that overwhelming sense of dread and doom.

  • @mablesmaplemoose1175
    @mablesmaplemoose1175 Před 3 lety +334

    This feels like those dreams you have after a night and day of staying awake

    • @mohsen4ever710
      @mohsen4ever710 Před 2 lety +7

      It can't be explained,the feeling,just can be related to some words:
      Big,too much,late,can't,endless,..

    • @boponthewee7585
      @boponthewee7585 Před 5 měsíci +1

      those dreams hit different fr

    • @arthurfrost9004
      @arthurfrost9004 Před 3 měsíci

      my bro what sort of dreams you having

    • @mack8488
      @mack8488 Před 3 měsíci

      ​​@@arthurfrost9004he just told you😂....2 years ago 🤣

    • @mack8488
      @mack8488 Před 3 měsíci

      Lsd

  • @Yokaisenn
    @Yokaisenn Před rokem +5

    Whoever came up with this is a fvcking genius.

  • @ayemchunt1714
    @ayemchunt1714 Před rokem +1

    That was absolutely awesome. The build up and the devastating ending for the android was superb. A very well done to the creator.

  • @Siptom369
    @Siptom369 Před 3 lety +239

    This is terrifying to be trapped with that robot for eternity

    • @Aduysvmncmkouyf
      @Aduysvmncmkouyf Před 3 lety +12

      But knowing that’s the only thing you’ll have left

    • @lukedykes2929
      @lukedykes2929 Před 3 lety +5

      A calm fear. A freezing phobia. The realization that it won't end.

    • @Aduysvmncmkouyf
      @Aduysvmncmkouyf Před 3 lety +1

      @@lukedykes2929 unlike your friendship with any girl

    • @Pandora234able
      @Pandora234able Před 3 lety +4

      @@Aduysvmncmkouyf why can’t you just be friends as if that’s settling down? Relationship isn’t always the next step and friendship can be important to. Why is that different for men than women?

    • @Aduysvmncmkouyf
      @Aduysvmncmkouyf Před 3 lety +5

      @@Pandora234able sorry the comment was extremely immature of me to say and completely unnecessary

  • @BiggusDickus333
    @BiggusDickus333 Před 3 lety +1028

    What gives men feel of power:
    Money? Meh
    Authority? Meahh
    Knowing turkish so you don't have to read subtitles: YES

  • @kenny995
    @kenny995 Před 2 lety +4

    Oooooh I knew it! I had a feeling that once he got dropped off it would just be more of him. What a great short film!

  • @verdantes695
    @verdantes695 Před 2 lety +4

    At first I thought there was a problem with the video and I was surprised that the video is in Turkish.
    greetings from Turkey

  • @lilysussman6211
    @lilysussman6211 Před 3 lety +646

    This is so mind blowingly good! The last scene was horrible, I can’t imagine an existence like that.

    • @skoci5159
      @skoci5159 Před 3 lety +6

      Why this existence have a mission and mission is his life.

    • @bibby659
      @bibby659 Před 3 lety +25

      He had asked to be put upon earth, and he got that wish, who knows just how many of him there are throughout the galaxy on different planets he visited, and had a similar thought as going back to earth, who knows just how very many versions of him have killed themselves, truly, a horrific thing to witness much less experience, but in the end, that itteration of him always ends up where he believes he can be happy, question is, is he truely happy there?

    • @vijaz5559
      @vijaz5559 Před 3 lety +2

      @@bibby659 unlikely, since happiness isn't a constant state. he will feel joy now, but who knows after it

    • @throatgorge2
      @throatgorge2 Před 3 lety +1

      can't imagine? you just did. it's an uncomfortable precipice .

    • @wasiftajwar149
      @wasiftajwar149 Před 3 lety +2

      Wheres the spoiler alert

  • @babbetto1
    @babbetto1 Před 3 lety +146

    Gorgeously animated. The robots voice was so sinister yet soothing.
    Profoundly sad and mesmerizing at the same time. Just wow.

  • @TheLordJaza
    @TheLordJaza Před 2 lety +3

    This should be on Love, Death & Robots !

  • @RandomJ2023
    @RandomJ2023 Před 2 lety +20

    Profoundly under-rated. This film is indeed prophetic.

  • @Alpha-omega-beginning-and-end

    Okay did anyone else think that when the robot had the gun, he was going to either shoot the man or itself?

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII Před 3 lety +112

      I did at first until he replaced the bullet and I realised he was setting things up to rerun everything one more time.

    • @waggoneer
      @waggoneer Před 3 lety +32

      @@PhilJonesIII Checking all the planets again, they may have improved in the eons? And the human wakes up with no knowledge of the intervening test cycles? Or, sadly, no planet will ever be "perfect."

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII Před 3 lety +16

      @@waggoneer Not if the man was replaced by my ex-wife. Nothing could be perfect in her eyes.

    • @legrandgougoulilumine6940
      @legrandgougoulilumine6940 Před 3 lety +14

      I thought the robot was going to shoot them both..
      Ending the man's miserable life and ending his protocol for not being able to fulfill his duty as a protective robot.

    • @JayDee-xj9lu
      @JayDee-xj9lu Před 3 lety +2

      @@PhilJonesIII So the robot is your exwife. Lol.

  • @generik7414
    @generik7414 Před 3 lety +114

    This is a really good example of a paperclip maximiser type robot.
    Functions exactly how it was designed, just designed slightly wrong with unforeseen consequences

  • @jeff-8511
    @jeff-8511 Před 2 lety +2

    Eternity without being able to die/cease to exist is extremely scary. Imagine you are stuck somewhere and you’ll forever be there without being able to die.

  • @hannahg5216
    @hannahg5216 Před 4 měsíci +1

    This short was locked away in my memory and I’m pleased to have discovered it again by accident.

  • @TheMysticalTank
    @TheMysticalTank Před 3 lety +86

    This is taking the laws of robotics to a different level...

    • @jakobkristensensandvik5588
      @jakobkristensensandvik5588 Před 3 lety +11

      Many AI "doomsday" scenarios are based on the possibility that robots may use it's basic programming to do something completely unintended.
      An example I have often seen is that an AI is programmed to protect humans, but sees humans as the ultimate threat to humans (because of nuclear weapons, climate change etc.) and decides that in order to protect humans it must wipe out humans.

    • @krshna77
      @krshna77 Před 3 lety

      @@jakobkristensensandvik5588 well, humanity is famous for pulling half baked laws and principles out of its ass, so yeah.

    • @KrotowX
      @KrotowX Před 3 lety +1

      @@jakobkristensensandvik5588 Make sense. Matrix also was made to preserve humans without allowing them to harm themselwes anymore. Including a little profit for robots.

    • @jakobkristensensandvik5588
      @jakobkristensensandvik5588 Před 3 lety

      @@KrotowX No, the Matrix is more like a prison for the remaining humans - to use their bodies as batteries to fuel the machines. It's not to protect the humans.
      Unlike in the scenarios I described, the robots in The Matrix are not following a warped mission to "protect humans". In this universe, humans got scared that the robots were getting too powerful and attacked them. The robots retaliated in self-defense and a global war ensued in which the robots won and enslaved humanity.

  • @madman6962
    @madman6962 Před 3 lety +502

    how distressing it must be for him to discover he has already done this a thousand different times

    • @dncviorel
      @dncviorel Před 2 lety +50

      you mean 6 times. :)))

    • @lardlover3730
      @lardlover3730 Před 2 lety +10

      @@dncviorel I suppose so, yeah.

    • @jamess7263
      @jamess7263 Před 2 lety +31

      I don't understand why his previous iterations didn't do ... apparently ANYTHING. With all that time they could have beautified earth, altered their robot forms, possibly cloned humans from corpses or something. Come up with a way to thwart the robot when it returns. SOMETHING. I mean, "all habitable planets in the galaxy" it's a few weeks trip. Did they just STAND AROUND whining for possibly 1,000s of years?

    • @dylanalbertson5269
      @dylanalbertson5269 Před rokem +30

      @@jamess7263 or maybe the area in the desert isnt fit to build their new society but the robot always drops off at the same spot so they went to the drop off to gather their new clone

    • @Lumberjack_king
      @Lumberjack_king Před rokem +4

      Only 6 but probably over thousands of years

  • @TROGULAR10000
    @TROGULAR10000 Před 3 lety +5

    This is just superior to any other animated sci-fi I've seen, amazing visualizations.

  • @sliedogg
    @sliedogg Před 2 lety +1

    This is the most amazing story I've ever seen in my entire life. Please someone make this a full feature film or an amazingly well done VR game.

  • @starhalv2427
    @starhalv2427 Před 3 lety +272

    Solution: keep him in mashine body forever, and let him visit some planets in that way. His real body will meanwhile be perfectly safe.

    • @solei5678
      @solei5678 Před 3 lety +70

      I don’t think he actually has a “real body,” at least anymore. This entire run of finding an alternative has been done again and again for the benefit of the robot. It’s questionable if this is anything remotely like what the man was, as the robot had so many copies of him stored. The real curiosity is what will happen if enough android clones of him gather. Far more hardy than a human body, what civilization could grow from these new “individuals” if they are able to grow at all. They are creations of the robot, whom exists forever in an unending cycle of its own design.

    • @daveroll6463
      @daveroll6463 Před 3 lety +15

      considering he couldnt tell the difference that he was in a robot body, i'd say this is a good tradeoff!

    • @julietm.2853
      @julietm.2853 Před 3 lety +17

      All the machine men can work together and engineer a way to save himself. It would be very difficult to outsmart the robot or damage it or the ship, but maybe it could be done.

    • @nexusdrop7863
      @nexusdrop7863 Před 3 lety +19

      @@solei5678 The robot CAN NOT do it for it's own benefit. The 3rd law is it must protect itself unless it conflicts with the 1st or 2nd law.
      1st law is it can not harm, or by inaction allow a human to come to harm.
      2nd law is it must follow orders unless it conflicts with 1st law.
      The robot could be ordered to blow itself up, if it would insure he lives. Problem is the robot knows it can keep him alive and anything else is a risk. Risk close to zero but never as close to zero of a risk as in the care of the robot.
      There is only selfless devotion and genuine concern for him. That is the darkest part.

    • @janaterbio8010
      @janaterbio8010 Před 3 lety +6

      @@nexusdrop7863 Indeed so and this is what driving this man insane. He didn't thought deeply when he asked to be sent to another planet similar to Earth, without thinking of even the slight probability of even finding an exact replica of it that the robot has come to the conclusion decided to find. In its own way, this is both hell for them, but one is merely following orders and doing it's duty while the other is suffering endlessly for his desire. And it's been 50-60 something planets so far, what then after a hundred or more?

  • @lionobama1397
    @lionobama1397 Před 3 lety +150

    the robot placed back the gun meaning that it was ready for another one of him and the hims on the earth were just him following the same path inevitably for the new one to follow?

    • @sarahoshea9603
      @sarahoshea9603 Před 3 lety +9

      Exactly

    • @nexusdrop7863
      @nexusdrop7863 Před 3 lety +23

      Yes. And it happened many times.
      The drive, reason, and explanation of WHY the robot is doing that is the3 laws of robotics:
      1st law - a robot can not harm, or by inaction allow a human to come to harm.
      2nd law - a robot must follow the orders of a human unless it conflicts with the 1st law.
      3rd law - a robot must protect itself unless it conflicts with the 1st or 2nd law.
      The robot follows all 3. Just in a very different manner than expected.

    • @janaterbio8010
      @janaterbio8010 Před 3 lety +8

      @@nexusdrop7863 I have been wondering this, should we call it robot? I'm certain it isn't appropriate to call it as an A.I since it does evolve, but I'm not sure if that is correct.

    • @jwadaow
      @jwadaow Před 3 lety +2

      @@nexusdrop7863 would you call that harmless?

    • @The1337Duke
      @The1337Duke Před 3 lety +16

      Yep!
      From the dialog, we can infer that the robot made the spaceship for the man, and the man told it to perfectly replicate his room as it was back on earth. He also hardcoded the three laws into the robot. The robot is simply following the original instructions, replacing the loaded gun every time, and not allowing the man to come to harm in any way. That also means making sure he doesn't harm himself with the gun, and so the mind of the original man is simply placed into a new body, with the original body being tucked away some place safe. The video is about designing programs or entities meant to protect us, (like for example, a police force) but if that entity is given too much power over our freedoms, and it's not made with considerations to human flaws and psychology, it will trap us in an endless cycle of despair, destruction and horror. It's a very clever metaphor.

  • @jonahlefholtz8219
    @jonahlefholtz8219 Před 2 lety

    Wow, this is beautiful. It also roused some existential despair I haven't had to acknowledge in years.

  • @boingbong7348
    @boingbong7348 Před 2 lety +1

    The design of the robot is amazing. Ornate but still captures that strange mechanical otherness.

  • @ynntari2775
    @ynntari2775 Před 3 lety +698

    Turkish sounds so fricking much like a cool arcane language if you read the texts at the start of the video

    • @chewbacca3269
      @chewbacca3269 Před 3 lety +4

      You mean the three laws of Isaac Asimov that were translated in turkish?

    • @ynntari2775
      @ynntari2775 Před 3 lety

      Yes

    • @krshna77
      @krshna77 Před 3 lety +33

      Turkish is a beautiful language in its own way. I don't speak a single word of it, but to me it looks and sounds intriguingly complex, sophisticated, strangely wild, often rough, sometimes smooth, very opaque and yet somehow very ... human ... for lack of a better word.
      If you listen to some of their traditional music, you'll get an air of "different", and might even like it after a while.

    • @ynntari2775
      @ynntari2775 Před 3 lety +37

      For me, spoken Turkish sounds like a person is failing to decide if they're gonna speak in German, French, English, Russian, Korean or Japanese

    • @mwanikimwaniki6801
      @mwanikimwaniki6801 Před 3 lety +5

      @@ynntari2775 it shares many features with those languages

  • @MukeshPanicker
    @MukeshPanicker Před 3 lety +306

    Moral of the story - There is no ideal world or utopia , stay happy where you are and make it a happy place.

    • @giovanna722
      @giovanna722 Před 3 lety +9

      Mukesh Panicker Yes, I agree! There's an old saying about the grass always being greener on the other side of the fence.. The description mentions that the earth was "in disarray". I'm guessing that's a euphemism.

    • @ivantorres8210
      @ivantorres8210 Před 3 lety

      Agreed

    • @DBT1007
      @DBT1007 Před 3 lety +4

      so that means.. stay inside that ship?

    • @bm0_225
      @bm0_225 Před 3 lety

      @@DBT1007 mind blown!

    • @dylanisaac1017
      @dylanisaac1017 Před 3 lety +5

      That’s not a very good moral

  • @59Smokey94
    @59Smokey94 Před 2 lety +2

    Absolutely amazing animation and story line - so glad I found it - randomly.

  • @whatsagoodusername823
    @whatsagoodusername823 Před 2 lety +7

    This is why you put tolerances on whatever parameters you set, as well as an abort mechanism in the event that you miscalculated/misjudged something.

  • @Ixarus6713
    @Ixarus6713 Před 3 lety +66

    In a way, the robot is in it's own escape pod... eternally searching the stars on a pointless quest just to keep itself alive like the humans who built it (a drive which the old man now regrets)

    • @secondsein7749
      @secondsein7749 Před 3 lety +15

      Pretty much. The story is about the robot just as the human. The robot knows that once the human's directive is fulfilled, it will have no other purpose or perhaps it will get a new one from the human, but that new purpose might not be what the robot would like. So it found a loophole, as long as there is a 'human' to serve, it will have a purpose to live.
      Just like the human find purpose to live outside the ship, the robot find purpose to serve.

    • @nexusdrop7863
      @nexusdrop7863 Před 3 lety +5

      No. The 1st and primary function of the robot is to keep the human alive. Nothing, to include itself, is above that. 3 laws of robotics (text at the beginning) is what occurs. His orders are ignored because it would risk his life. The robot IS searching for a safe place for him, but a sharp rock is a threat.

    • @wizgi7201
      @wizgi7201 Před 3 lety

      I dont think the robot has its own sense of self, it doesnt think it just analyzes

    • @jwadaow
      @jwadaow Před 3 lety

      @@nexusdrop7863 a robot may not injure a human being or through inaction allow a human being to come to harm. That includes imprisoning them against their will incidentally.

  • @Tryst46
    @Tryst46 Před 3 lety +315

    Points out a minor flaw in Asimov's 3 laws.
    There should be 4 laws and the first should be : A robot may not interfere with a human who wishes to bring harm to themselves.
    That would mean a robot could not prevent you committing suicide or doing something dangerous if it was your own choice to do it.

    • @dryoldcrabman6890
      @dryoldcrabman6890 Před 3 lety +18

      That would conflict with rule 1

    • @THINKMACHINE
      @THINKMACHINE Před 3 lety +105

      Law 4: "A robot shall suspend laws 1, 2 and 3 for the sole purpose of following the orders of humans who explicitly knowingly and willingly wish to risk or cause harm to only themselves."

    • @chrisik8217
      @chrisik8217 Před 3 lety +10

      He might not even be human anymore... Maybe just that his mind data is stored in some Crypt and downloaded into new bodies

    • @Tryst46
      @Tryst46 Před 3 lety +14

      @@dryoldcrabman6890 That would BE rule number 1. The current rule number 1 would then be rule number 2 and cannot conflict with rule number one.
      That allows a robot to prevent human coming to harm, but not if they are intentionally comitting suicide.

    • @defiantnight2668
      @defiantnight2668 Před 3 lety +49

      The entire point of Asimov's laws is their flaws, that's what the story was about

  • @seamus9305
    @seamus9305 Před 2 lety +1

    This is a masterpiece. Had to go back the next day and watch again.

  • @Demebeso714
    @Demebeso714 Před 2 lety +2

    Seeking ..constantly searching for perfection when it does not exist...never has..never will...

  • @guywith_dog
    @guywith_dog Před 3 lety +166

    you know it's a serious film about robots when it starts with the 3 laws

  • @pitatutube
    @pitatutube Před 3 lety +383

    Good story, very good realisation. I was waiting for the human to create a task for the robot to give him a logic idea to let him go back to earth. Humans do not just need suitable conditions to survive phsically (Water, food, home, climate conditions) but also mental (Acceptance, a feeling to be needed by others, love). A spacecraft with a robot cannot fullfill these requirements.

    • @davepauljoseph5267
      @davepauljoseph5267 Před 3 lety +1

      Exactly

    • @neverthesame7887
      @neverthesame7887 Před 3 lety +27

      The "man" does say that to the robot. At one point he states that there is more to health than just the physical.

    • @1bigfin
      @1bigfin Před 3 lety +3

      Should have the robot create a Cherry 2000.

    • @ReasonMakes
      @ReasonMakes Před 3 lety +2

      Mental health is only relevant to survival at a certain point. The robot has ensured that mental health will never endanger the survival of the human.

    • @davepauljoseph5267
      @davepauljoseph5267 Před 3 lety +8

      @@ReasonMakes Idk about that. The man did shoot himself. What's the point of survival in such a situation?

  • @gatedscs
    @gatedscs Před 2 lety +2

    Movie is amazing where you are bound to believe that all angles are taken care of while developing the story line. But, the only nook that I see of is about A.I. programming. Being a programmer myself, I see that one who develops such an advance A.I. will not code it to search habitable planet based on Brute Force method. Also, it is true that there can't be an exact planet like earth as molecular configuration will obviously be different than that of Earth. So, most logical choice of the next Earth like planet will be the one which can sustain life and not just replica of Earth. But anyways, story line, animation, direction and art involved are fantastic and meet all expectation of a viewer. 9.8/10

    • @triplepen
      @triplepen Před 2 lety

      Hello Ubi. You are right about programming logic. But I was picturing that robot function with something like a mutated code. Imagine a piece of AI which is capable of changing itself to function better and definition of ''better'' of this A.I is kind of toxic. I though this might be the result. I am glad you liked my film ^^ Happy to share something with bright people.