Categories: Uncategorized

Robogeddon Won’t Be James Cameron’s First Foray Into Robotics

Director James Cameron is expected to team up with reality television producer Mark Burnett to create a new show, called Robogeddon, in which remote-controlled robots do battle in an arena. Automatons have been a preoccupation during Cameron’s varied career, during which he has frequently explored the ways humans and advanced machines could interact, for good or ill. In Cameron’s second feature film, 1984’s Terminator, an android played by Arnold Schwarzenegger served as the titular antagonist, a relentless foe with organic, human-like flesh covering a metal exoskeleton. Schwarzenegger returned in 1991’s Terminator 2, but as an ally to the humans – and his interactions with Edward Furlong’s 10-year-old lead explored the capacity for understanding between human and machine consciousness. In 1986’s well-received sequel Aliens, Sigourney Weaver’s character learned to trust a robotic crew member played by Lance Henriksen – who explains that he prefers the term “artificial person” – despite another robot having fatally malfunctioned in the prequel film Alien. “I see our potential destruction and the potential salvation as human beings coming from technology and how we use it, how we master it and how we prevent it from mastering us,” Cameron reportedly said of technological themes in his films. “Titanic was as much about that theme as the Terminator films, and in Aliens, it’s the reliance on technology that defeats the marines, but it’s technology being used properly that allows Sigourney’s character to prevail at the end.” In real life, Cameron has used remote-controlled submersibles to explore shipwrecks and wildlife at the depths of the ocean, resulting in documentaries Expedition: Bismarck and Ghosts of the Abyss. His 1989 film The Abyss, a claustrophobic science fiction epic set on a deep sea oil rig, also included fictional deep-sea drones as a central plot element. The TV niche of remote controlled robots killing each other in an arena has been sparse since Comedy Central’s BattleBots was cancelled in 2002. That show was a strange mashup that incorporated former Baywatch actresses Donna D’Errico and Carmen Electra, science educator Bill Nye, and robot carnage in various weight classes. Burnett is known for having produced popular reality television shows Survivor and The Voice.

Image: TriStar Pictures
Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Recent Posts

Houston-based startup announces integration of orbital biomedical OS to advance biological discovery in low Earth orbit

Commercial space station developer Starlab Space announced this week that it has partnered with Helogen…

3 días ago

What the launch of Revenue OS by ADvendio signals for the future of agentic advertising

It won't come as a surprise that agentic AI holds tremendous promise for the advertising…

6 días ago

Billdr relaunches as new “OS” for construction back office, raises $3.2 million

Software company Billdr, which is building the AI-native operating system for construction, announced in late…

2 semanas ago

Ness appoints new CTO to ATONIS to bring intelligent engineering to enterprises

AI has long promised to unlock widespread operational efficiencies, automate workflows and generate key business…

2 semanas ago

Crescite Bets on Faith-Driven Finance With Catholic USD™, a New Kind of Stablecoin

Crescite Innovation Corporation is entering the stablecoin space with an approach that challenges the dominant…

4 semanas ago

AI maintenance startup Fracttal raises $35 million to scale predictive asset management

Fracttal, a leading company in AI-powered maintenance solutions, announced on Wednesday it has closed a…

1 mes ago