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Film review: Transcendent Man

Director Barry Ptolemy's moving documentary about futurist and inventor Ray Kurzweil reveals deep hopes for humanity's "transhuman" future, says Amanda Gefter
Film review: Transcendent Man

directed by Barry Ptolemy

RAY KURZWEIL has a recurring dream. In it, he is walking through an endless series of empty rooms, unable to find another human being. This is his vision of death, one marked by profound loneliness and exile from human relationships. In , ‘s moving documentary about the futurist, we find that this same loneliness haunts Kurzweil through the spectre of his father, who died from heart disease when Kurzweil was in his twenties.

“I felt frustrated in that keeping him alive was a goal that slipped through my fingers,” Kurzweil laments. Throughout the film we see that Kurzweil has spent his adult life avenging his father’s death with attempts to vanquish death itself. “Here’s to living forever,” says Kurzweil’s wife, Sonya, raising her glass of red wine. “That’s not just a salutation in our family.”

Whether Kurzweil is a modern-day prophet or a crackpot is a matter of debate, though no one can deny his prolific resumé of inventions and his impressive track record for predicting the future of technology. The opinions in the film range from that of MIT’s (“[Kurzweil] takes things that everyone agrees on and principles for extrapolation that everyone agrees on and makes predictions that no one agrees with.”) to Wired editor Kevin Kelly (“Ray’s right, but not about the timing.”) to San Francisco Chronicle reporter Tom Abate (“Do we really want old codgers with a lot of money hanging around and mucking up the works?”).

In telling Kurzweil’s personal story, Transcendent Man also tells the story of humanity’s future, be it a utopian or dystopian one. Remarkably, the two stories come together as if inextricably linked. Perhaps this isn’t surprising: Kurzweil’s preoccupations represent the most basic aspects of the human condition – existential angst and a fear of death combined with a deep sense of loss. Kurzweil is optimistic that these will melt away in the next two decades when humans merge with machines as the confluence of biotechnology, nanotechnology and artificial intelligence transform our world beyond recognition. His hopefulness is infectious.

Perhaps Kurzweil’s optimism is of a tragic variety – but that doesn’t mean he is wrong.

Topics: Books and art

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