Posted on 05/16/2026 5:37:49 AM PDT by Red Badger
In this Blaze Media article, Christian Toto argues that Hollywood has been warning audiences about the dangers of artificial intelligence for decades, often more prophetically than the tech industry would like to admit.
The article opens with the “Terminator” franchise as perhaps the most famous cinematic warning about unchecked AI, with Skynet representing the nightmare scenario of machines turning against humanity.
* “Her” is presented as a quieter but deeply relevant warning about AI replacing human intimacy, especially as real-world AI companionship and digital romance become increasingly normalized.
* “Ex Machina” explores the danger of artificial beings that can manipulate humans by exploiting emotions, vanity, and desire.
* “M3GAN” shows the folly of treating AI as a substitute for real family, grief, discipline, and human connection.
* “2001: A Space Odyssey” remains one of the most iconic AI cautionary tales, with HAL demonstrating how a machine designed to serve man can become a threat when its goals diverge from human judgment.
* “Blade Runner” complicates the conversation by raising moral questions about what happens when artificial beings appear to possess emotion, memory, and meaning.
* “Colossus: The Forbin Project” is highlighted as a forgotten but chilling film about a supercomputer created to prevent nuclear war that decides humanity cannot be trusted with its own future.
The broader warning is clear: AI is not merely a productivity tool or entertainment novelty, but a force that could reshape relationships, warfare, morality, and human autonomy if left unchecked.
Read the full story:
https://www.theblaze.com/align/6-movies-that-warned-us-about-ai
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What about Dune?
Are you a lunar landing denier?
Dune wasn’t about time travel, per se, but space travel.
Spice enabled certain individuals to manipulate ‘space-time’ by folding it to achieve travel from star system to star system, then letting it ‘snap back.’.............
None of those are about AI. But OK. They’re good movies. But they’re much more about people.
It warned about AI. It showed a fictional interplanetary civilization 10000 years after an anti AI jihad.
In the universe of Dune, laws against thinking machines stem from an event known as the Butlerian Jihad, where humanity revolted against advanced computers and artificial intelligence, leading to their destruction. The guiding principle is encapsulated in the command, “Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind.”
That is true, but the original series by Herbert didn’t explain much about the previous 10k years except to name it and that’s about it. It wasn’t until the prequels written by his son and Kevin J. Anderson that the reader actually found out what started the war on Thinking Machines. The sequels by that same pair then explained how they (actually just Erasmus) had guided humanity for millennia to the point that the Machines and humans could co-exist.............
Not sure if 2001 was necessary to film Apollo, or Apollo necessary to film 2001.
Dead “the Swimmer” Kennedy benefited from both.
Once upon a time, I was a spook.
Yes.
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