6.0
Curtis Pike and his family are selected to test a new home device: a digital assistant called AIA. AIA observes the family's behaviors and begins to anticipate their needs. And she can – and will – make sure nothing – and no one – gets in her family's way.
John Cho
Curtis
Katherine Waterston
Meredith
Keith Carradine
Marcus
Havana Rose Liu
Melody / AIA (voice)
Lukita Maxwell
Iris
Ashley Romans
Sam
David Dastmalchian
Lightning
Wyatt Lindner
Preston
Isaac Bae
Cal
Bennett Curran
Sawyer
Greg Hill
Henry / RV Man
Riki Lindhome
Maud / RV Woman
Ashton Essex Bright
Jackson
Mason Shea Joyce
Eli
River Drosche
Kaden
Todd Waring
Papa
Simon Craig Raynes
Johnny
Rogelio Douglas III
Young Man
Zeke Alton
Paramedic
Pam Cook
Lady
Ben Youcef
Ben
Louis De La Costa
Samuel
James Mitchell-Clyde
SWAT Team Leader
Vaughndio Forbes
SWAT Team Member #2
Maya Manko
Aimee
J.D. Garcia
Masked Figure #1
Dustin Stern-Garcia
Masked Figure #2
Timothy Thomas Brown
Masked Figure #2
Jimmy Galeota
Jimmy
Rachael Hip-Flores
Original AIA Voice (voice)
Frank Scozzari
Crime Scene Looky-loo (uncredited)
Elliott McKenzie
SWAT Team Member (uncredited)
Director, Writer
Chris Weitz
August 31, 2024
5
John Cho was clearly a bit desperate to get off the starship "Enterprise" so took on the mantle of the dad "Curtis" in this predictable and derivative sci-fi yarn. He's happily married to "Meredith" (Katherine Waterston); they have three kids and he's in the advertising business. When his business is offered a fortune by an AI company to support their new at-home assistant "AIA", he finds his family are now the chief guinea pigs on the user-testing front. What now ensues sees the family's hitherto peaceable existence thrown into exaggerated turmoil by this gadget that ostensibly wants to help each of them out, but that does - of course - merely highlight plenty of the demons and issues that each is facing or has suppressed over the years. In some ways the plot does focus on the encroachment of technology in our lives and as "Curtis" himself asks, at what point will we ever be satisfied with the level of involvement it has in our existence before we call a halt to continued "enhancements", but those philosophical moments are few and far between as this short-ish drama follows an oft-travelled path that is short on scares and long on the been there, seen that. None of the acting is worth writing home about, nor is the screenplay and it's initially quite menacing premiss is swiftly reduced to something episodic that just makes me wonder how long we'll have to wait for "AfrAId II" or "Still AfrAId?". It's adequate TV fodder for the winter, but otherwise little better than an weakly adapted short story that fits perfectly into the mediocrity of the Blumhouse churn-factory.