What was this movie called..?!


Question: Well i remeber it had Haley Joel Osment in it and I think his mom thought he was an alien or something like that & she left him in the woods & in the end the mom and him and sleeping in the bed & he wakes up and makes his mom coffee.

I know this isn't very descriptive & he's been in tons of movies but I don't exactly remeber the name or all of the details.


Answers: Well i remeber it had Haley Joel Osment in it and I think his mom thought he was an alien or something like that & she left him in the woods & in the end the mom and him and sleeping in the bed & he wakes up and makes his mom coffee.

I know this isn't very descriptive & he's been in tons of movies but I don't exactly remeber the name or all of the details.

A.I.: Artificial Intelligence (2001)
aka Artificial Intelligence: AI
starring Haley Joel Osment, Sam Robards, Frances O'Connor, Jude Law, Jake Thomas, William Hurt
IMDB synopsis:
In the not-so-far future the polar ice caps have melted, and the resulting raise of the ocean waters has drowned all the coastal cities of the world. Withdrawn to the interior of the continents, the human race keeps advancing, reaching to the point of creating realistic robots (called mechas) to serve them. One of the mecha-producing companies builds David, an artificial child~the first to have real feelings, especially a never-ending love for his "mother". Monica is the woman who adopts him as a substitute for her real son, who remains in cryostasis, stricken by an incurable disease. David is living happily with Monica and her husband, but, when their real son returns home after a cure is discovered, his life changes dramatically.
TRIVIA:
Haley Joel Osment suggested to Steven Spielberg that his character (David) should not blink. Spielberg agreed and went further to suggest that none of the androids should blink. In fact, several of them do (see goofs).

Although Jack Angel recorded all of his voice work for Teddy while separate from the rest of the production, he was asked to be on set every day, to re-record lines immediately when necessary.

John Williams quotes Richard Strauss' "Der Rosenkavalier" waltz in the underscore during the approach Rouge City. This was a done to honor Stanley Kubrick, who left few notes regarding the music except to tell Steven Spielberg that this Strauss waltz should appear in the film. Williams refers to his score, which contains a number of musical allusions to Kubrick's films in addition to the waltz, as his "homage a Kubrick".

While this film was based on the Brian Aldiss short story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long," that short story has less influence on the movie than the famous poem by William Butler Yeats, "The Stolen Child." The text of the poem appears in the movie in two places, and certain stanzas take on literal meaning as well (e.g. "Till the moon has taken flight").

One of the reasons for Stanley Kubrick waiting so long to make the film is that he wanted David to be played by an actual robot. After "Jurassic Park" (1993) was made, Kubrick looked into using digital computer effects to create David. Kubrick worked on the project for 12 years before his death, but along the way decided to let Spielberg direct, saying it was "closer to his sensibilities". The two collaborated for years, resulting in Kubrick giving Spielberg a complete treatment and lots of conceptual art for the film prior to his death.



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