Close Menu
  • Home
  • Crypto News
  • Tech News
  • Gadgets
  • NFT’s
  • Luxury Goods
  • Gold News
  • Cat Videos
What's Hot

Cat 🐱 Revers video #cat #cats #catvideos #catshorts #catlife #catvideo #catshort #billi #viralvideo

June 23, 2026

Meta Reportedly Dips Its Pathetic Toes Into The Prediction Market Space

June 23, 2026

XRP Price Prediction For June 24

June 23, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
KittyBNK
  • Home
  • Crypto News
  • Tech News
  • Gadgets
  • NFT’s
  • Luxury Goods
  • Gold News
  • Cat Videos
KittyBNK
Home » Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die rails against AI in style
Tech News

Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die rails against AI in style

February 13, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die rails against AI in style
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

You’ve seen this movie before: A disheveled man (Sam Rockwell) busts into a restaurant, threatening to blow up the joint unless a crew of people joins him. Like Groundhog Day, he’s been through this countless times before, and he immediately starts recounting otherwise unknowable details to convince the diner patrons. Like 12 Monkeys, he’s from the future — the timely twist in Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die is that, rather than a world-ending virus, he needs help preventing a humanity-ending AI from being born.

Good Luck is more of a primal scream than a thoughtful articulation about where everything went wrong. There’s a bit of “old man yells at cloud” energy here (director Gore Verbinski is 61, and screenwriter Matthew Robinson is 47), but it fits the film’s satirical tone. Looking around at the world today, who doesn’t wish they could warn their past selves about the tech industry and the new ruling class it helped breed.

Rockwell’s character eventually wrangles a ragtag crew of future saviors: Mark and Janet (Michael Pena and Zazie Beetz), a married couple of high school teachers; Susan (Juno Temple), a distraught mother; and Ingrid (Haley Lu Richardson), a sad woman wearing a princess dress. There’s also Asim Chaudhry’s Scott, who mostly serves as comic relief, but doesn’t get any real backstory like the others.

Good Luck wastes no time fleshing out its present near-dystopia in episodic chapters. It turns out Mark and Janet are also on the run from smartphone-obsessed high schoolers, who spend their days scrolling through endless TikTok-like feeds. Susan is forced to confront a horrific situation around her son (I won’t get into specifics here, but it’s a distinctly American phenomenon). And Ingrid is literally allergic to Wi-Fi and smart devices, which makes it hard to fit into the modern world.

Each of these scenarios play out like mini Black Mirror episodes. Everything is heightened to the absurd, and all the problems can be traced back to unchecked technological encroachment and capitalism. Nothing subtle there. The glimpses of an apocalyptic future are even less so — all we see are destroyed cities, people trapped in VR headsets (which place them in an AI-generated reality) and robots hunting down anti-AI humans.

Sam Rockwell in Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die. (Briarcliff Entertainment)

Good Luck is at its best when it’s simply having fun. As Rockwell and crew make their way to their final destination — a child who is about to invent true AI — they encounter pig-faced assassins, Stepford-esque parents and an adorably horrific kaiju. Even when faced with half-baked scripts, Verbinski always manages to impress visually (think back to the creepiness of The Ring, or the wildly entertaining set pieces in Pirates of the Caribbean). That’s as true as ever here, where the final scene evokes the hyper-tech chaos of Akira.

As much as Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die, evokes classic sci-fi, it still can’t hold a candle to the sheer terror of seeing AI unleash a nuclear bomb in Terminator 2. And despite its zanines, it doesn’t reach the madcap heights of Gilliam’s Brazil or 12 Monkeys. But if you’re sick of having AI products shoved down your throat, and you think the notion of “true AI” is a farce, it’s a fun way to channel your rage.

Credit: Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Meta Reportedly Dips Its Pathetic Toes Into The Prediction Market Space

June 23, 2026

How To Get The Most Out Of Your Apple TV+ Subscription

June 23, 2026

Oracle Laid Off 21,000 Employees Over The Past Year, Citing AI As One Of The Reasons

June 23, 2026

Meta Is ‘Pausing’ Employee Tracking Program After It Let The Whole Company See Sensitive Data

June 22, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

What's New Here!

The Italian Sea Group To Partner with Kitson Yachts

April 10, 2024

CZ Shares Investment Tips: ‘Fundamentals, Long-Term Bets’

April 3, 2025

X appears to be suppressing Trump-related searches

August 10, 2024

How iOS 26 Enhances Messages, Camera, and Lock Screen

September 17, 2025

Toyota’s Best Race, Rally & Road Cars To Appear at Goodwood

July 2, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Telegram
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA
© 2026 kittybnk.com - All Rights Reserved!

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.