Finch Film ((top)) Review

Finch offers a poignant counter-narrative to the cynical views often present in science fiction. While the world of the film is undeniably bleak, the story focuses on the triumph of creation over destruction. By transferring the responsibility of empathy to an artificial host, Finch ensures that the human spirit survives the death of the human body. The film concludes that even in a world stripped of life, the greatest technology is not the one that destroys, but the one that remembers how to love. Through the relationship between a dying man, a loyal dog, and a learning robot, Finch quietly redefines the post-apocalyptic genre as one of hope rather than despair.

: Finch struggles to explain abstract concepts like "trust" to a machine that operates on logic. finch film

This isn’t the loud, Oscar-clip Hanks. This is the exhausted, sarcastic, brilliant Hanks. He plays Finch as a man who has spent so long surviving that he forgot to live. His frustration with Jeff’s clumsiness isn’t cruelty—it’s the fear of leaving unfinished business. Watch his eyes when Jeff takes his first independent step. That’s not pride. That’s grief starting early. Finch offers a poignant counter-narrative to the cynical

His dialogue is what sells it. Jeff is naive but eager. He asks questions about trust, death, and ice cream with the curiosity of a toddler. The uses Jeff to ask the classic sci-fi question: What makes us human? Is it the ability to reason? Jeff can do that. Is it empathy? Jeff learns it. By the final act, you forget Jeff is a machine. You see a child having to bury a parent, and it is devastating. The film concludes that even in a world