Alex Garland engineered Ex Machina as an incredibly dense, claustrophobic chamber play, utilizing the foundational architecture of early European science fiction and psychological drama. The striking visual design of the synthetic woman, Ava, is deeply indebted to the iconic Maschinenmensch from Fritz Lang's Metropolis, perfectly updating the German Expressionist nightmare of the artificial human for the silicon age. To cultivate the film's agonizing sense of psychological manipulation and identity slippage, Garland looked toward the abrasive, intimate dualities of Ingmar Bergman's Persona. Combined with the philosophical, slow-burn dread of Tarkovsky's Stalker, the film transcends standard tech-paranoia to become a chillingly elegant meditation on consciousness.
Films That Influenced Ex Machina