Current:Home > My'Atlas' review: Jennifer Lopez befriends an AI in her scrappy new Netflix space movie -WealthEngine
'Atlas' review: Jennifer Lopez befriends an AI in her scrappy new Netflix space movie
View
Date:2025-04-15 09:25:56
Just when you think you’ve seen everything, here comes a movie where Jennifer Lopez tries to out-sass a computer program.
Jenny from the Block is in her Iron Man era with “Atlas” (★★½ out of four; rated PG-13; streaming Friday on Netflix), a sci-fi action thriller directed by Brad Peyton (“San Andreas”) that pairs two hot commodities: a pop-culture superstar and artificial intelligence.
The movie shares aspects with a bevy of films like “Blade Runner,” “The Terminator,” "The Iron Giant" and “Pacific Rim,” and it’s best to not think too hard about the science involved. Yet there’s a scrappiness to “Atlas” that pairs well with a human/machine bonding narrative and a fish-out-of-water Lopez trying to figure out how to work a super cool, high-tech armored suit and not die spectacularly.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
But “Atlas” doesn’t have the best start, beginning with the mother of exposition dumps: In the future, AI has evolved to a dangerous degree and a robotic terrorist named Harlan (a charmless Simu Liu) has turned genocidal, wanting to wipe out most of mankind. He’s defeated and retreats into space, vowing to return, and in the ensuing 28 years, counterterrorism analyst Atlas Shepherd – whose mother invented Harlan and made him part of their family before he went bad – has been trying to find him.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
She’s distrustful of Al and also most humans: The antisocial Atlas’ only true love is coffee but she’s also crazy smart, and she figures out the galaxy where Harlan’s hiding. Atlas forces herself on a military space mission run by a no-nonsense colonel (Sterling K. Brown) to track down Harlan, but amid a sneak attack by cyborg bad guys, Atlas has to hop in a mech suit to survive. The caveat: to run the thing, she has to create a neural link with an onboard AI named Smith (voiced by Gregory James Cohan).
Streaming preview:15 new movies you'll want to watch this summer, from 'Atlas' to 'Beverly Hills Cop 4'
Obviously, there’s a climactic throwdown with Harlan – you don’t need ChatGPT to figure out the predictable plot – and there are plenty of action scenes with spotty visual effects. But “Atlas” cooks most when it’s just Atlas and Smith, sniping and snarking at each other: He fixes her broken leg, her cursing expands his vocabulary, and slowly they figure out a way to coexist and become a formidable fighting unit.
Lopez does well with the buddy comedy vibe as well as her whole "Atlas" character arc. The fact that she starts as a misanthropic hot mess – even her hair is unruly, though still movie star-ready – makes her an appealing character, one you root for as she becomes besties with a computer and finds herself in mortal danger every five minutes.
While “Atlas” doesn’t top the J. Lo movie canon – that’s rarefied air for the likes of “Out of Sight” and “Hustlers” – it’s certainly more interesting than a lot of her rom-com output. Her action-oriented vehicles such as this and the assassin thriller “The Mother,” plus B-movie “Anaconda” and sci-fi film “The Cell” back in the day, show a willing gameness to venture outside her A-list box.
It also helps when she finds the right dance partner – in this case, a wily AI. And in “Atlas,” that unlikely friendship forgives the bigger glitches.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- H&M's Sale Has On-Trend Winter Finds & They're All up to 60% Off
- Brazil’s Lula takes heat on oil plans at UN climate talks, a turnaround after hero status last year
- Consumer product agency issues warning on small magnetic balls linked to deaths
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- A Soviet-era statue of a Red Army commander taken down in Kyiv
- Former Black Panther convicted in 1970 bombing of Nebraska officer dies in prison
- Kids are losing the Chuck E. Cheese animatronics. They were for the parents, anyway
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- The EU wants to put a tax on emissions from imports. It’s irked some other nations at COP28
Ranking
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Homes damaged by apparent tornado as severe storms rake Tennessee
- Ukraine’s Zelenskyy heads to Argentina in bid to win support from developing nations
- Why Shohei Ohtani will be worth every penny of $700 million contract for Los Angeles Dodgers
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Teen gunman sentenced to life for Oxford High School massacre in Michigan
- Tensions are soaring between Guyana and Venezuela over century-old territorial dispute
- US Coast Guard helicopter that crashed during rescue mission in Alaska is recovered
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Catholic priest in small Nebraska community dies after being attacked in church
3 people killed and 1 wounded in shooting at Atlanta apartment building, police say
AP PHOTOS: Moscow hosts a fashion forum with designers from Brazil, China, India and South Africa
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
High school students lift car to rescue woman, 2-year-old child in Utah: Watch video
With a New Speaker of the House, Billions in Climate and Energy Funding—Mostly to Red States—Hang in the Balance
American skier Breezy Johnson says she won’t race during anti-doping rules investigation