![]() ![]() ![]() Robots that are able to reproduce, scavenging metal and electrical items to feed and repair themselves, literally using tin cans to birth a new generation of their species. As Frank – who believes that they have come in response to his prayer – says, “The quickest way to end a miracle is to ask it why it is. You name it, they can put it back together again, from rubble to restoration.īut why do they like to fix things? Is it out of kindness? Or is it some primitive need, or inbuilt programming? Where are they from? How did they get here? And why? We’ll never know. But why ‘Fix-Its’? Because, we are told, “they like to fix things”: ripped paper, shattered glass, shredded electricals, broken china, even – metaphorically speaking – human hearts. ![]() The Fix-Its are cartoonishly male and female – angular versus curved, small yellow eyes versus large blue ones – and their babies, when they appear, are even more ridiculously, squeal-inducingly cutesy. They appear in the sky one night – small espoused spaceships in search of a power source – seemingly in response to a prayer, a wish, a desperate cry for help, from the residents of an old, run-down apartment block in New York’s East Village: the last building standing amongst the rubble of a demolition site. the Extra-Terrestrial and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the Fix-Its are both flying saucer and alien in one. But back in the innocent(!) 80s, the idea of mechanical things that could fly by themselves was merely whimsical and to be wished for. If this movie were made today, this drone-story might take a more sinister direction, as seen in a recent episode of The X-Files. In 2018, the most immediately striking thing about * batteries not included is that the Fix-Its, the little mechanical creatures that the movie revolves around, are essentially living drones. ![]()
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