

In a setup that in no way makes me think of the globe’s current overreaction to error-prone AI, the creator of the I-500 surveillance computer system is under serious pressure to rush his supposed technical marvel to the marketplace. No matter how often Ed (Gary Day, Death Warmed Up) tells corporate his prototype isn’t ready, the head honchos don’t listen because, duh, money.
Yet the I-500 really be buggin’. It forces Ed’s car off the road, paralyzing him below the waist and rendering him wheelchair-bound. Ed’s bosses kindly respond with a demand to finish the project by month’s end. To decrease distraction, they set him up in a swanky, 10th-floor apartment.
An Aussie omelet of elements from Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window, Brian De Palma’s Blow Out and Donald Cammell’s Demon Seed, writer/director Mark Egerton’s Crosstalk trips over its own plotting, uncertain of which track to take. The I-500 appears to continue trying to ixnay Ed, yet the creator also uses his creation to spy on a female neighbor — and hopefully solve what he assumes to be her murder by her philandering spouse (John Ewart, Razorback). You’ll never hear “insinkerator” more than within the film’s compact 83 minutes.
In some ways, this jumbled, two-left-feet approach resembles the indecisive, often contradictory visuals. After all, residents of the fancy high-rise reach their floors via an elevator that looks more like a shipping container for human trafficking. Not like the apartment interiors are much more pleasing with design that mimics two schools of design: New Orleans bordello and Atari-age science museum.
The much-hyped I-500 should knock our socks off, yet it’s an instantly dated, dual-reel mainframe spittin’ ones and zeros while tacking up the space of a theater concession stand. I swear one of its monitors is devoted to generating nothing but digital Spirographs. Not even the sudden appearance of a disembodied head in a washer makes Crosstalk worth booting up. —Rod Lott











