Pages

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Will Ash REALLY Be Right Back?

In the Episode of Black Mirror, Be Right Back, a woman, Martha, is faced with the moral dilemma of whether or not to reanimate the ideas of her dead boyfriend in the body of an android. At the funeral of her deceased boyfriend, Ash, a friend of hers suggests that she use a software that will mimic him in conversations. At first, Martha refuses, but after her friend signs her up for the program anyways, she finds herself becoming more and more attached to the program, as if it were a real person. Eventually, she is convinced by the software to purchase an android that will look and sound exactly as the old Ash did, but when she receives and animates the robot, she finds herself more freaked out than comforted. As Ash 2 learns small mannerisms and lingo that the original Ash used to use, Martha finds herself more and more attached to the android than she originally wanted to be.
I don’t think that this is a morally sound way to grieve over a person’s death, as it can isolate them from the reality of that person really being gone. In the show, Martha constantly rejects the company and consolation of other LIVE humans just to enjoy the company of the software designed to mimic the actions of her late significant other. She was reached out to by her sister and other friends many times, but ignored their phone calls just to text and talk to this software that was impersonating Ash. Ash 2 was definitely not a sound way of coping, as she directly expressed many times that he wasn’t acting entirely like the original Ash did. Although the program was designed to learn along the way, that is a problem in itself because it doesn’t give her the closure that she needs. Instead, she just kept creating new memories with Ash 2. I think it would have been a good idea to let the robot jump off of the cliff instead of placing it in the attic, because when her daughter was born, instead of learning to grow up without a dad, she became accustomed to the fact that an exact replica of her late father was sitting up in the attic, waiting for her whenever she wanted to see him.

 This film also presented an example of the uncanny valley, as she was extremely uncomfortable with the life-likeness of the android Ash for the first few days of his arrival. She didn’t want to touch him, or even be near him at first because of the fact that she knew that he wasn’t a live human, although he appeared to be such.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your post made me realize the parallel of Ash I being totally engrossed in his phone, to the extent he somewhat loses touch with reality, with Martha being totally engrossed in Ash II, to the extent she ignores other human beings. I think that's a really interesting thing you picked up on and thought provoking in the context of the discussion of her coping.

Unknown said...

I agree that the film provided us with an example of the uncanny valley, and honestly, I believe any of us would act that way towards something that appears human like, but we know its not. I loved your comment about how it isolates the person from reality, because thats exactly what she does. She's trying to pretend that Ash is still with her, when he's not.

Angela Montoya said...

I agree with your point of this not being the best way to grieve someone because I can defiantly see how easily this situation could go wrong.

Unknown said...

I like how you pointed out that Martha isn't letting her daughter naturally grow without a father. The episode ends with a very condensed conversation between the two. I wonder if the little girl is aware that Ash 2 isn't the same thing her father would be. Also, since Ash2 is technically just mocking what the real Ash was based on the information provided, how does Ash2 act if no one knows what the real Ash would've been like as a father?

Unknown said...

"Martha constantly rejects the company and consolation of other LIVE humans just to enjoy the company of the software" I like how you reference this because we can see in society today how people have become so attached to their phones that they become disconnected to other humans in their environments and this could be a real problem in the future because if real human figure software becomes available then we could be disconnected to one another all together

Unknown said...

Having an android is bad in it's self. Its crazy how Martha could have a clone of her husband. She should definitely find another way to grieve about her husband.