Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die rails against AI in style
Sam Rockwell’s character recruits diner patrons to insert AI safety protocols in the past, aiming to prevent a future AI apocalypse after 116 failed attempts.
10 Articles
10 Articles
How The Matrix and video games inspired Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die's wild ending
In the slapstick science fiction action movie Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die, an alleged time traveler played by Sam Rockwell appears in a Los Angeles diner with a plan to avert the apocalypse. The world is about to end, he proclaims, if a group of volunteers can’t help him stop a child genius from creating an evil AI.
‘Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die’ a half-baked anti-AI romp
Inside a diner in Los Angeles, customers scroll through their phones as coffee is poured, burger patties are flipped, food is plated and a selection of condiments is dramatically lit. Ultimately, in “Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die,” the well-meaning but disappointing first film in a handful of years from “The Ring” director Gore Verbinski, it’s the phones that are important. A hooded man (Sam Rockwell) enters the diner, announcing that he’s from…
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