Mars Express backdrop
Mars Express

Mars Express

Built to serve. Programmed to live.

7.5 / 1020231h 29m

Synopsis

In 2200, private detective Aline Ruby and her android partner Carlos Rivera are hired by a wealthy businessman to track down a notorious hacker. On Mars, they descend deep into the underbelly of the planet's capital city where they uncover a darker story of brain farms, political corruption, and a missing girl who holds a secret about the robots that threatens to change the face of the universe.

Genre: Animation, Science Fiction, Action, Mystery

Status: Released

Director: Jérémie Périn

Website: https://gkids.com/films/mars-express

Main Cast

Léa Drucker

Léa Drucker

Aline Ruby (voice)

Mathieu Amalric

Mathieu Amalric

Chris Royjacker (voice)

Daniel Njo Lobé

Daniel Njo Lobé

Carlos Rivera (voice)

Marie Bouvet

Marie Bouvet

Roberta Williams (voice)

Sébastien Chassagne

Sébastien Chassagne

Inspecteur Simon Gordaux (voice)

Marthe Keller

Marthe Keller

Beryl (voice)

Geneviève Doang

Geneviève Doang

Jun Chow / Jun Chow 2 (voice)

Thomas Roditi

LEM (voice)

Thierry Jahn

Vlasek / Vendeur / Homme du bar (voice)

Serge Faliu

Serge Faliu

Faux M. Chow / Père de Jun / Reporter / Technicien (voice)

Trailer

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

By the 23rd century, Mars has been colonised by humanity thanks to advanced android technology. It’s here that private investigator “Aline” and her robotic counterpart “Carlos” have been hired to track down an hacker by the gazillionaire owner of one of the leading tech companies. Pretty swiftly they realise that this is going to be a dangerous and duplicitous business and they are soon embroiled in something altogether more internecine and sinister. Now the plot here isn’t the most original, indeed for much of the first hour is does scream “I, Robot” (2004) at us, but then it embarks on something more original as the concept of brain farming is introduced. This is essentially the harvesting of excess brain capacity from people who are selling their cerebral processing capacity to help create the ultimate in AI. The question is, why and who for? Moreover, as this duo dig deeper they begin to discover some uncomfortable truths about the evolving dynamic in the relationship between human beings and their supposedly subservient automated creations. The animation is stylish and there’s plenty of shoot-out action for ninety minutes here, but it’s really the philosophy that helps this stand out. It challenges so many assumptions about a master/servant relationship and delivers a denouement that I found to be sensibly apposite. It packs quite a bit of thought and creativity into it and is well worth a watch.