Skip to content

I, ROBOT

Written By:

Rich Cross
i-robot

A new five-part audio adaptation of Isaac Asimov’s acclaimed 1950 novel I, Robot, being broadcast on BBC Radio Four this week, is a carefully crafted and distilled evocation of the themes of the original novel. This new dramatization provides a powerful reminder of the contemporary resonance of Asimov’s view of the development of robotic technology, and is also a riveting listen.

 

Writing during the 1940s, Asimov’s prose revealed a mixture of fascination and of anxiety at the prospect of ‘the rise of the robots’ at a time when the idea of ‘intelligent machines’, capable of independent thought and action, was simply the stuff of fantasy. As computer automation, smart devices, artificial intelligence and other technologies have become ever more prevalent, the questions, contradictions and costs that the prescient Asimov set out in the series of interlinked short stories that comprise I, Robot seem even more pertinent than they were when the book was first published more than sixty-five years ago.

 

Asimov’s “Three Laws of Robotics” has become a continual reference point for both the authors of science fiction and for those working on cutting-edge robot technology in the real world. Yet, it is sometimes forgotten that Asimov used the stories of I, Robot not just to set out the imperatives of those laws, but also to explore the dramatic and the existential consequences of those laws not being upheld.

 

In this new radio version, a B7 production for the BBC, scriptwriter Richard Kurti updates Asimov’s expectation that mechanical (rather than digital) invention would trigger exponential robotic innovation, and prioritises the story of central protagonist Stevie Byerley. The drama follows her story from her early childhood through her career as a robotics psychologist, to her rise to the highest levels of world governance. By an accident of birth, she grows up at the very time when the development of robotic technology accelerates to such a level that it can increasingly displace human labour, even as human beings extend their reach across the galaxies. Throughout this, robots remain the constant feature of Stevie’s life.

 

Opening episode “Robbie” tells the story of her upbringing, in which the character of the titular robot takes on the parenting role. Stevie’s devotion to and love for Robbie comes to disturb her parents, and her mother in particular comes to resent being usurped in her child’s affections. Stevie, however, resists their efforts to break the bond between them. After the adult Stevie recuperates from a devastating car crash, she returns to work as a ‘legal psychologist’, motivated by a desire to establish just and logic-based relations between humans and machines.

 

In “Reason”, she encounters an off-world robot with an inexplicable Messiah complex, and in “Little Lost Robot”, she must deal with another sentient machine whose literal obedience to instructions becomes a covert act of rebellion. After the disturbing events of “Liar”, in which she investigates a robot that has developed unexpected mind-reading capabilities, events comes to a head in “The Inevitable Conflict”. This finale uncovers Stevie’s previously hidden motives and exposes a wholly new perspective on the interplay between humanity and increasingly capable artificial beings.

 

The cast is uniformly strong. Nick Briggs delivers impressively nuanced performances as the questioning robot “Cutie” and the “Nestor Ten” devices, but it is Hermione Norris’s focused portrayal of the driven and unshakeable Stevie that propels the story forward so convincingly.

 

Sound design and music are both effective, but director Andrew Mark Sewell, recognising that this is a drama which pivots on questions of identity and of ‘being’, applies the restraint necessary to ensure that it is ideas which take centre stage. Asimov’s original texts are economic and functional, some might even say stark. This adaptation celebrates that pared down approach to storytelling, but prevents Asimov’s treatment of big philosophical concepts from becoming sterile by ensuring that it is the dilemmas of the human (and of the not-quite-human) characters that the listener is encouraged to reflect upon.

 

Perceptive, intriguing, insightful, and rendered with precision and with conviction, this is just the kind of quality audio that gives hard sci-fi a good name.

 

I, ROBOT / WRITER: ISAAC ASIMOV / ADAPTED BY: RICHARD KURTI / DIRECTOR: ANDREW MARK SEWELL / STARRING: HERMIONE NORRIS, DIANNE WELLER, KELLY BURKE, ROB BLACKWOOD, MIA BURGESS, NICK BRIGGS / A B7 PRODUCTION FOR BBC RADIO 4 / RELEASE DATE: 6-10TH FEBRUARY (BROADCAST); 11TH FEBRUARY (OMNIBUS); OUT NOW (IPLAYER RADIO) 


Rich Cross

You May Also Like...

russell crowe stars in the exorcism trailer

THE EXORCISM Trailer Stars Russell Crowe As A Haunted Actor

The first trailer for demon possession horror The Exorcism, starring Oscar winner Russell Crowe, has been released… not to be confused with the demon possession horror The Pope’s Exorcist, starring
Read More
jodie comer in the end we start from, to star in 28 years later

Jodie Comer & Aaron Taylor-Johnson Join 28 YEARS LATER

Some of Britain’s finest actors are entering the zombie apocalypse, as Deadline reports that Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, and Ralph Fiennes are boarding 28 Years Later. Danny Boyle is directing
Read More
jennifer lopez in atlas trailer

Full Trailer Drops For JLo-Starring Sci-Fi ATLAS

Jennifer Lopez is forced to confront her ambiguous feelings about artificial intelligence in the first official, full-length trailer for Netflix’s science-fiction feature, Atlas.  Per the official synopsis, Atlas follows Atlas Shepherd
Read More
lakeith stanfield to star in and produce film adaptation of neo noir vampire video game el paso, elsewhere

LaKeith Stanfield To Star In Film Adaptation of Vampire Video Game EL PASO, ELSEWHERE

LaKeith Stanfield, who most recently starred in Jeymes Samuel’s sophomore feature, The Book of Clarence, is teaming up with veteran producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura for El Paso, Elsewhere, an adaptation of the
Read More
the darkness outside us book illustration

Elliot Page To Adapt Sci-Fi Novel THE DARKNESS OUTSIDE US

The Darkness Outside Us is looking to move from ink and paper to the big screen, with The Hollywood Reporter announcing that Pageboy Productions, the banner run by Oscar nominee Elliot Page, Matt
Read More
till of deadpool kissing dog from full trailer for deadpool & wolverine

DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE Are Back In Full Trailer

Ryan Reynolds has taken over from Marvel Studios to post the very first, full-length trailer for Deadpool’s highly-anticipated third outing in Deadpool & Wolverine, marking the Merc with a Mouth’s entry into
Read More