COMPANION
7/10
Sharply written concoction of sci-fi thriller, character drama, and crime thriller serves up a convincing near future where young couple Sophie Thatcher and Jack Quaid hit the woods for a weekend with friends. Alas, it turns out Thatcher’s really a robot with an implanted affection for “love-bot” owner Quaid, and once the party host (Rupert Friend) ends up dead at Thatcher’s hands in an act of self-defense, things get spicy – just as they do for the other reason they’re gathered there.
Drew Hancock wrote and directed “Companion,” which has obvious thematic similarities to other, recent entries in the “crazed-female-automaton” genre, notably “M3gan” and “Ex Machina.” However, “Companion” proves to be a lot smarter than the former and much less depressing than the latter, serving up dry humor and an engaging tone with just enough fresh plot elements for the picture to work. Thatcher, a standout on the Showtime series “Yellowjackets,” proves appealing here while Quaid manages to be enough of a sufficiently likeable jerk for the material to effectively straddle the line between black comedy and thriller. It’s not a classic but “Companion” satisfyingly stays within its lane from start to end, working especially well if you haven’t bothered to watch any of its trailers.
Warner’s good-looking UHD (2.39) includes just a few short featurettes, a Digital HD code, HDR10 and Dolby Atmos sound – I admit also I was a sucker for the movie’s soundtrack, as any film that finishes with the great Samantha Sang/Barry Gibb hit “Emotion” can’t be all bad.