THE COMPANION (1994)
A review on IMDb compared The Companion to an episode of The Outer Limits (the 90's version). Yes. Exactly. I'm not even sure that I can describe this film any more accurately than that, but I'll try. This time, the android is a mock human that you can purchase and reprogram to fit your needs. Gillian is given a "companion" as a gift. She names it (well, him) Jeffrey and takes him to a remote cabin where she intends to write her next smutty romance novel. At first, the cybernetic steward acts as a butler. He cleans, he chops wood, and he knows every Italian recipe under the sun. The perfect mate? Well, hold the phone. He comes off a bit dry, so Gillian takes it upon herself to reprogram his sexuality. She also enables an option known as "random data." Big mistake. It isn't long before Jeffrey is dispatching anyone he perceives to be a threat, and that includes minor nuisances. He puts an axe (or some other tapered weapon) into the neighbor, a wormy louse played by the late Brion James.
The Companion was made for the USA Network. That explains why I hadn't heard of it until scouring the web for any movie involving a cyborg. You can tell it was sculpted for television, but you know what? It's good. Like, really good. There's my critic quote for the Blu-ray release. Bruce Greenwood is dialed in as the titular robo-dude. He knows when to play Jeffrey with humility and when to go into "mecha-mode." Kathryn Harrold is superb as the heroine, even if her decision-making skills are, shall we say, questionable. Taking the limits of the medium into consideration, the death sequences are lacking...teeth? The Companion could definitely use an R rating, but that's a paltry charge. This is the second best flick I watched for Random Robot Month next to...am I really going to mention Evolver again? Sorry, it was tubular. The Companion is tubular in its own way. Director Gary Fleder later helmed Kiss the Girls, which I might revisit tonight.*
*I don't know why I added the asterisk. Should I leave it? Yeah, I'll leave it.










