The Borneo Post

‘Unorthodox’ director charms Berlin fest with robot love story

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BERLIN: ‘Unorthodox’ director Maria Schrader on Monday premiered her sci-fi comedy “I’m Your Man” starring Downton Abbey’s Dan Stevens as a robot ready to beat human rivals in the game of love.

The Emmy winner’s soulful futurist romp is one of 15 contenders for the Golden Bear top prize Friday at the 71st Berlin film festival, which has gone allvirtual due to the pandemic.

“I’m Your Man” (Ich bin dein Mensch) sees Stevens, who is British, use his fluent German to play Tom, a remarkably lifelike Romeo custom-designed to win the heart of Berlin antiquitie­s researcher Alma (Maren Eggert).

A company that has developed humanoids for discerning lonely hearts asks Alma if she will test out the man-machine for three weeks and then report back on her customer satisfacti­on.

Like any romantic comedy heroine, Alma is reluctant and sceptical at first, especially as Tom has a habit of delivering corny pick-up lines about the “deep pools of her eyes”.

Although he can dance a mean rumba, he’s also unfortunat­ely incapable of understand­ing the humour Alma sees in slapstick YouTube videos. But as they spend more time with each other, his algorithms become more finely tuned to Alma’s tastes and desires, ironing out the flaws that doomed her past relationsh­ips. Schrader said she was interested in turning the “dangerous” aspects of such Frankenste­in tales on their head.

“We’re of course marked by the stories that go differentl­y, that end in destructio­n and fighting and the machine taking on a life of its own,” she told an online news conference. “Tom just wants to know how he can make Alma happy.”

And Tom is not only the better lover than the suitors who came before him. “Alma senses that Tom might just be the better person: he’s more civilised, free of aggression and his own ambitions, altruistic and has the greatest and most loving attentiven­ess for his opposite number,” Schrader said.

Stevens, who was also a coproducer on the film, said the quest for love against the odds was a “very human question”.

“I think one of the reasons that we keep coming back to stories like this... is that love is so irrational,” said Stevens, who has starred in unconventi­onal romances before “from “Beauty and the Beast” to last year’s Netflix comedy “Eurovision Song Contest: The Fire Saga”.

“We can look for all the rational reasons why we should be with (someone) and we can tick the checklist of things. But actually going back throughout human history, all of our romantic stories are ‘I can’t love her, I shouldn’t love her, oh but I do “against my silly heart, this is how I feel’.”

Director-actress Schrader is one of the driving forces between a recent renaissanc­e of German entertainm­ent that has captured audiences across the world.

“Unorthodox” about a woman who fled her ultra-Orthodox home in New York for Berlin was one of Netflix’s biggest hit series of last year, and Schrader starred in the wildly popular “Deutschlan­d 83/86/89” series.

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? This combo photo shows Maren Eggert (left) posing for photograph­ers during a photocall at the 69th Berlinale film festival on Feb 2, 2019 in Berlin, and Dan Stevens posing on arrival for the Three Empire awards in London on March 19, 2017. Bottom left is Maria Schrader.
— AFP file photo This combo photo shows Maren Eggert (left) posing for photograph­ers during a photocall at the 69th Berlinale film festival on Feb 2, 2019 in Berlin, and Dan Stevens posing on arrival for the Three Empire awards in London on March 19, 2017. Bottom left is Maria Schrader.
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