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 History will place an asterisk next to A.I. as the film Stanley  Kubrick might have directed. But let the record also show that Kubrick--after  developing this project for some 15 years--wanted Steven Spielberg to helm this  astonishing sci-fi rendition of Pinocchio, claiming (with good reason) that  it veered closer to Spielberg's kinder, gentler sensibilities. Spielberg inherited  the project (based on the Brian Aldiss short story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long")  after Kubrick's death in 1999, and the result is an astounding directorial hybrid.  A flawed masterpiece of sorts, in which Spielberg's gift for wondrous enchantment  often clashes (and sometimes melds) with Kubrick's harsher vision of humanity, the  film spans near and distant futures with the fairy-tale adventures of an artificial  boy named David (Haley Joel Osment), a marvel of cybernetic progress who wants only  to be a real boy, loved by his mother in that happy place called home.
   Echoes of Spielberg's Empire of the Sun are clearly heard as young David,  shunned by his trial parents and tossed into an unfriendly world, is joined by  fellow "mecha" Gigolo Joe (played with a dancer's agility by Jude Law) in his  quest for a mother-and-child reunion. Parallels to Pinocchio intensify  as David reaches "the end of the world" (a Manhattan flooded by melted polar ice  caps), and a far-future epilogue propels A.I. into even deeper realms of  wonder, even as it pulls Spielberg back to his comfort zone of sweetness and  soothing sentiment. Some may lament the diffusion of Kubrick's original vision, but  this is Spielberg's A.I. (complete with one of John Williams's finest scores),  a film of astonishing technical wizardry that spans the spectrum of human emotions  and offers just enough Kubrick to suggest that humanity's future is anything but  guaranteed. --Jeff Shannon
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