Nathan’s estate is not a home; it is a bunker. Designed like a retro-futurist ski lodge, its hallways are concrete, glass, and exposed circuitry. The walls are not just walls—they are observation decks, power conduits, and, crucially, weapons. Garland shoots the compound as a character itself: sterile, beautiful, and utterly imprisoning.
In the pantheon of 21st-century science fiction, few films have cut as deeply, or as cleanly, as Alex Garland’s 2015 directorial debut, Ex Machina . On its surface, it is a chamber piece: three characters, one remote location, a handful of days. But beneath its sleek, minimalist surface churns a dark, philosophical maelstrom about consciousness, voyeurism, and the toxic masculinity embedded in the very act of creation. ex machina -2015-
The real ex machina—the god from the machine—is not Ava. It is our own hubris. And it is absolute. Nathan’s estate is not a home; it is a bunker