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Big brother is
watching you. That seems to be the common theme amongst
science fiction films
that take place in the near future; a totalitarian society where the
government believes it is in your best interest to monitor you 24
hours a day, seven days a week. Eyeborgs can be categorized into
that genre, but it does provide a fresh concept that for a
low budget film is executed quite well.
After another terrorist attack on United States soil, the
Department of Homeland Security has decided to eliminate the
people’s right to privacy by taking all
security cameras
and putting them onto one network. Also monitoring the streets and
homes are the title, looking like mechanical spiders with a huge
roving eye at its center, which is used simply in helping catch
suspected criminals. Federal agent Gunner Reynolds (Adrian
Paul of Highlander fame) relies on these “eyeborgs” to
successfully catch these criminals, but he soon begins to suspect
that the robots are enacting their own brand of justice in their own
bloody way.
The plot does loosely resemble “I, Robot” on a much lower budget
but it has enough going on its own to recommend. The eyeborgs are
complete CGI (and it does show in High Definition at spots) and
don’t look completely original, however I love the name of the
system they are on (it’s acronym is O.D.I.N.) . The story however is
interesting and holds up well, especially in this time of paranoia.
The theme of man against machine is a common one in film and it’s
not more apparent than in this film. What does work best is since
the eyeborgs are all in the same security system, they can
manipulate any image to make it appear like they haven’t done
anything, plus they make all murders look like an accident. There
are some bonus points for adding a subplot involving the president
of the United States and his nephew, who is a punk rocker.
Adrian Paul carries the lead well. As a fan of Highlander, he does
have a good presence and brings a charm to Agent Reynolds that
carries you through the film. The female lead is of course the
intrepid reporter/possible love interest by
Megan Blake who is alright in her role. The only other star
in the film is
Danny Trejo who only shows up for a few scenes but brings his
usual badass presence as a music store owner. The real star of the
film are the eyeborgs themselves and if you can get past the CGI
(and let’s be honest, most of you won’t), you can get through the
film.
The Blu-Ray brings a nice quality transfer at 1080p, and the film
looks sharply made.
Image Entertainment has done a fine job with the disc.
There’s six deleted and extended scenes, four behind the scenes
futurities (including one funny one called “How To Make Robots In
Three Minutes”
and a blooper reel.
Eyeborgs isn’t great. It isn’t totally original. However it packs
enough for it to recommend for a cheesy fun time. The theme and
premise will entice the conspiracy theorists and it’s just plain
entertaining.
- Alan G. Richter
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