Robots who don’t know they’re robots have become the new darlings of science fiction.
From Blade Runner 2049 to Subservience to I’m Not a Robot, the question of what it means to be real has taken center stage. Companion doesn’t break new ground, but it sharpens familiar ideas into something haunting and alive.
The story unfolds in a near future where engineered companions, programmed with synthetic emotions, fill the gaps real people can’t.
Sophie Thatcher leads the film with a fierce, wounded performance as Iris, a creation who seems almost too human. Jack Quaid plays her owner with the right mix of warmth and menace, suggesting how easily love curdles into control.
Director Drew Hancock keeps the frame cold and clinical. The sets are sterile, the colors washed out, the silences longer than the conversations.
Companion builds tension not through chases or action, but through stillness — the slow recognition that identity can be manufactured like a product.
For most of its running time, the film trusts the audience. It raises questions about autonomy, loneliness, and guilt without shouting them.
Alas, the ending doesn’t quite hold. As the story rushes toward its conclusion, it wobbles into melodrama. Characters who once felt human start making decisions that belong more to plot mechanics than to themselves.
Another weakness is how closely Companion mirrors I’m Not a Robot. No accusations have been leveled, and the timeline suggests coincidence. Still, the resemblance is strong enough that Companion could have been called I Am Not I Am Not a Robot. It’s a distraction the movie never fully outruns.
Even with those slips, Companion lingers. It asks how much of ourselves we’re willing to hand over to comfort. And whether, once we do, we are anything more than machines ourselves.