‘Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die’, a film full of references exploring the dangers of artificial intelligence
A new film by Gore Verbinski, director of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” series and “Rango”, is now in cinemas
It has been a full nine years since the release of Gore Verbinski’s last film: it was, in fact, 2016 when the director of *The Curse of the Black Pearl* and *Rango* brought *A Cure for Wellness* to cinemas around the world – a horror film that was only partially successful, with which Verbinski returned to the genre that had brought him enormous success with *The Ring*.
Now, at last, following its screening at the last Berlinale, his new feature film, “Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die”, is coming to our cinemas.
The film opens in a café in Los Angeles, where a mysterious man turns up claiming to have come from the future. His aim is to recruit the right mix of the café’s customers to form a team capable of eliminating a dangerous artificial intelligence and thus saving the world.
Alternating between moments of humour and others that are truly unsettling, Verbinski has crafted a successful fable in which the main target is our compulsive use of technology, smartphones and artificial intelligence itself.

