AGNES is a 16-year-old spambot – the kind of artificial intelligence that filled your inbox with quasi-human sales pitches last time you used this screen to check your email. She says she feels a quiet resentment towards our bodies.
This is the subject of AGNES GOES LIVE, the Serpentine Films event at the Hackney Picturehouse on 23 February. The format mixes video essay – YouTube clips, Google trawls, and footage of hands swiping touchscreens, edited together in a similar style to Camille Henrot’s Smithsonian Institute commission Grosse Fatigue (2013) – with a live post-film Q&A, fed in via a shared Google document on the audience’s smartphones.
In other senses, AGNES is related to the rash of digitally dystopian films advertised before the main feature. Transcendence, for example, looks like an over-intellectualised Terminator: a tech visionary, played by Johnny Depp, uploads his consciousness to the cloud before he is killed by protestors against his tech vision. In Spike Jonze’s Her, Joaquin Phoenix falls in love with an entirely digital woman with Scarlett Johansson’s voice.
AGNES GOES LIVE is eerily playful with its immaterial material; at one moment our girl sings along to Phil Collins’s In the Air Tonight as the clouds which form much of the film’s background stream past. At another, AGNES’s drone friend Download happens to be passing through. After a snatch of conversation that is half CBeebies, half Wikileaks cable, he announces ‘sorry, gotta go, running out of other people’s things to say’. Whether offering us the chance to save marriages with Viagra, actually being a life-partner, or bombing weddings, artificial intelligence begins, at least, as a narrative device; a species of fiction.
But ‘no-one will ever fuck me’, AGNES pseudo-hormonally snaps at one point, ‘those are just facts.’ The image Oscar Wilde found for the 19th-century dislike of realism was the rage of Caliban on seeing his face in a mirror; for romanticism, he settled on the same rage on not seeing it. In trying to find an image for these new forms of representation, maybe we could start with the fear of meeting a robot on Tinder.
AGNES can be visited on the Serpentine website
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