Who is the actress in I, Robot?

Who is the actress in I, Robot?

Bridget MoynahanSusan CalvinFiona HoganV.I.K.I.Adrian RicardGrannyEmily TennantYoung GirlSharon WilkinsAsthmatic WomanNicola CrosbieTV Anchor Person
I, Robot/Actresses

How much money did Will Smith make off I, Robot?

He Earned a Ton of $$$ From Music in the ’90s After the success of Men in Black in 1997, his salary skyrocketed and he made $14 million for Enemy of the State in 1998. Just six years later, he doubled that and raked in $28 million (yeah, you read that right) for I, Robot in 2004.

Who plays Sarah in I, Robot?

Emily Tennant (born August 9, 1990) is a Canadian actress.

Who was the villain in I, Robot?

V.I.K.I.
Virtual Interactive Kinetic Intelligence (abbreviated as V.I.K.I. or VIKI) is the main antagonist of 2004 sci-fi film I, Robot. She is a fictional supercomputer residing in USR headquarters bent on creating a dictatorship to ensure humanity’s survival due to their violent nature.

Who is the main character in I, Robot?

SonnyAlan TudykV.I.K.I.Fiona HoganDel SpoonerWill SmithSusan CalvinBridget MoynahanAlfred LanningJames CromwellFarberShia LaBeouf
I, Robot/Characters

Who played Gigi in I, Robot?

Fiona Hogan as Virtual Interactive Kinetic Intelligence, called VIKI for short. She was built by Dr. Lanning and is hardwired into USR’s headquarters with control over virtually all of the building functions. Adrian L. Ricard as Gigi, Det. Spooner’s grandmother.

What did the ending of I, Robot mean?

Del Spooner rescues Doctor Calvin from her automaton captors and discovers that she didn’t kill Sonny after all, which is good, because he’s really grown on the audience by this point. The trio goes to arrest Lanning’s old business partner only to find him already dead. It turns out that VIKI was to blame all along.

What happened at the end of I, Robot?

In the final scene of the film ‘I, Robot’, Sonny (a unique NS5 robot chosen by their designer) stands atop a hill overlooking scores of freed NS5s, who are themselves standing between two massive rows of red and blue shipping crates, an allusion to Moses’ parting of the Red Sea.

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