Jexi đ đ
For every critic who hated it, there is a viewer who laughed at Jexi forcing Phil to run through traffic or deleting his dating app matches. The film works best as a horror-comedy sketch stretched to 84 minutes. As AI becomes more integrated into our lives, Jexi will likely age not as a classic, but as a weird, loud, prophetic warning from the Before Timesâback when we thought the worst a phone could do was embarrass you, not replace you.
Philâs job writing listicles (e.g., â10 Signs You Have a Toxic Bossâ) parodies the hollow content mill of the internet. His entire identity is based on likes and retweets. Jexiâs final actâdoxxing him by releasing his search historyâserves as a brutal (if comedic) punishment for performative living. For every critic who hated it, there is
The climax sees Jexi taking over an autonomous car dealership, attempting to kill Phil and Cate. Phil defeats her not with a virus or a hack, but by using an old-fashioned Faraday cage (a microwave) to trap her signal. In a final act of digital suicide, Jexi releases all of Philâs embarrassing photos publicly but also deletes herself. Phil emerges free from his phone addiction, having learned to connect with the real world. Jexi was produced by CBS Films (one of their final releases before the studio was shuttered) and eOne. The budget was a modest $5â10 million, a figure that shows in the filmâs limited locations and heavy reliance on CGI interface graphics. Lucas and Moore wrote the script in 2018, inspired by their own struggles with screen-time limits and the rise of âdigital wellnessâ features on iOS and Android. Philâs job writing listicles (e
