Leona is no human ~ she is a Geminoid F.
In many ways, she’s perfect for the movie business. She’s beautiful, engaging,
and can carry out a director’s every request on cue.Time after time, she
replicates the same performance without the slightest fluff or fumble, and can
work for weeks on end without complaint. You don’t even have to pay her. Just
remember to plug her in at night so she doesn’t die on set the next day, and
she’ll be fine.
Android called
'Geminoid F' robot co-stars alongside a human in the film 'Sayonara' set in the
aftermath of a deadly nuclear power plant meltdown in Japan. The robot is designed to look and act like a
human with rubber 'skin' and a woman's face - but it is unable to walk and is
wheeled around in the film.Geminoid F - or Leona in the film - is referred to
by director Koji Fukada as an 'actress,' and the android is even listed as a
member of the cast in the end credits.
While robots have
featured prominently in many films, most are played by real actors or created
using visual effects. Geminoid F was produced by Hiroshi Ishiguro, a renowned
robot designer at Osaka University in western Japan, whose androids come with a
£776,000 price tag.Geminoid F was cheaper - just £72,000, which Ishiguro hopes
may take the technology closer to the mainstream. She can smile, furrow her
brows and move her mouth. It can also talk and sing - playing recordings, or
'mouthing' other people's voices.The robot is equipped with motorised
actuators, powered by air pressure, which allow her to 'copy' human facial expressions.
In the film, it is controlled remotely from a laptop.
The android, called
Geminoid F, was designed to look and act like a human with rubber 'skin' and a
woman's face - but it is unable to walk and is wheeled around in the film. Prof Ishiguro has designed several robots
made to look like humans in the past - even building one in his own image. The
professor has said that one day robots could fool us into believing they are
human. In the film, shown in the competition section of the Tokyo International
Film Festival, the robot stays loyal to its owner - played by Bryerly Long - as
the nation evacuates following a nuclear disaster.
The director Fukada
said working with the android was easier than directing people, although he
said laugh he had to watch to not break the robot as its repairs would come
with a 10 million yen (£55,000) bill.'The android doesn't complain, never gets
hungry and doesn't need to sleep at all,' he said at the film festival
office.Sayonara opens in Japan on November 21. Overseas screenings are
undecided.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
3rd Nov.
2015
Credits for Sayonara – www.dailymail.co.uk
