• Mercy review: Chris Pratt

    From Dumas Walker@42:17/1 to All on Thu Jan 22 08:49:26 2026
    Mercy review: Chris Pratt's new AI sci-fi thriller is so haphazard, you'll wonder if ChatGPT could do a better job of writing it

    Date:
    Wed, 21 Jan 2026 17:00:00 +0000

    Description:
    AI is taking over the world, but what if it swallowed the entire legal system too? Chris Pratt finds out in Mercy, but watching this film is more
    punishment than any generated court could dole out.

    FULL STORY

    I need everyone in the movie industry to listen up and repeat the following pact: "I solemnly swear to never make a film told through the lens of social media ever again. Never will I sit my main character in front of a screen, digesting the rest of the storyline through open internet tabs, Instagram
    feeds and MacBook files. I will only include digital elements if it
    effectively serves the plot."

    Agreed? Great, because Chris Pratt's new AI sci-fi thriller Mercy is the
    latest victim of this heinous crime. With a 101 minute runtime, Pratt spends
    90 of those sitting in the same chair, wrongly accused of a murder he didn't commit. Instead of being given a defense lawyer like a normal society would,
    he has to face off against an AI-generated judge in a 'mercy' courtroom (who conveniently looks exactly like Rebecca Ferguson).

    If he can't prove his innocence past a certain percentage, he'll be fried on the spot. Override the algorithm sufficiently, and he'll walk free. Cue an entire movie of sifting through ring cam footage, facetiming witnesses and finding crucial evidence on his daughter's private Finsta account.

    After about 15 minutes of this, the gimmick wears off pretty quickly. Pratt himself is clearly loving it (possibly due to the ease of his character also being called Chris) but unsurprisingly, this doesn't translate offscreen.
    Mercy is mundane in its own unique way, but there are few surprises it'll
    hit you over the head with its ambivalent AI messaging.

    Mercy refuses to call AI a hero or a villain, and that's a missed opportunity

    "Maybe humans and AI both make mistakes" is a line of dialogue in Mercy that I've only slightly paraphrased, and it sums up the movie's moral vagueness in one nifty sentence. Sure, we've just spent an hour and 40 minutes watching an AI-generated court judge nearly kill Chris over a wrongful conviction, but we all make mistakes, right?

    This was Amazon MGM Studios' chance to lay down the AI line by deciding what side of the industry argument they're on. Instead, they've chosen to sit on
    the fence, and that transforms any vim and vigor Mercy did have into pure monotony. If we're not using storytelling to send home a powerful message, especially about something so ever-changing, then what's the point?

    Of course, the point is to make a bit of money at the box office by seeming
    to touch on a topical subject. It's the same way that a social media
    influencer might look like they're supporting a social campaign, but are actually doing the surface-level bare minimum to help it. Mercy could have
    been an industry-changing heavyweight piece of art, but no let's play around with some CGI graphics instead.

    For a big-budget studio, these graphics feel incredibly cheap. This is where the most obvious connection to Prime Video 's take on War of the Worlds , starring Ice Cube, comes into play. Both have the same function and aesthetic look almost as if Amazon is ashamed that is uninspired slop is all it's got
    to offer.

    Almost no movie (perhaps with the exception of 2023 thriller Missing ) can
    use tech, screens and social media as its sole method of storytelling to its advantage the concept is as lame as lame comes. But our AI-fashioned Rebecca Ferguson is the jewel in our crown of criminal offenses.

    Even as a non-human entity, Ferguson shines. She's far from a voice of
    reason, but seeing the cracks in her generated facade is easily the most satisfying payoff in this otherwise faltering farce. She's also the only
    source of continuity when Mercy decides to finally let Chris out of his chair for an unhinged 15-minute duration, abandoning all of its narrative mechanics without warning.

    You get where I'm coming from here. ChatGPT could probably have written a
    much stronger script and overarching plot, while watching any other takes on
    AI or the digital world would be a more shrewd use of your time. Our best
    case scenario is hoping Mercy is popular enough to finance more Guardians of the Galaxy or Star-Lord content, and then never speak of it again.

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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/streaming/entertainment/mercy-review

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