Last Updated on January 24, 2025 by Angel Melanson
WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS.
The internet as we now know it today was built on a foundation of dehumanizing and objectifying women. The earliest version of Mark Zuckerbergโs Facebook was called โFacemash,โ and was a hot-or-not site where users could look at the student ID photos of college girls and determine which woman was more attractive. Before Jeff Bezos spent millions acquiring IMDb, it was a fan-operated movie database on the Usenet group “rec.arts.movies,โ and the โACTRESS LISTโ was loaded with men debating the hottest women in cinema. A cropped image of Lena Forsรฉn from the November 1972 issue of Playboy magazine was the first image ever turned into a JPG file, and the fact Janet Jacksonโs โwardrobe malfunctionโ at the 2004 Super Bowl wasnโt readily available is what inspired the launch of YouTube.
Simply put, the tech industry has always been filled with a bunch of pathetic losers who canโt get laid and have decided to make it all of our problems while simultaneously deeming themselves the arbiters of womenโs value, so a film like Companion is a life raft to cling to as we all desperately try to keep ourselves from drowning in the fascist tech-broligarchy of Trumpโs second administration.
As the trailer for the film already reveals, Iris (Sophie Thatcher) is the AI love-bot of Josh (Jack Quaid), but until a weekend getaway with all of โtheirโ friends goes awry, Iris does not know that sheโs a programmable partner. This realization is world-shattering for her, but it only gets worse when she learns how Josh has programmed her. Fortunately, the response is a clever, compelling, and cathartic bloodbath.
Written and directed by Drew Hancock, Companion lulls the audience in with a sense of familiarity as Iris and Josh meet their friends Eli (Harvey Guillรฉn), his boyfriend Patrick (Lukas Gage), and Kat (Megan Suri) at the home of her older, eccentric millionaire boyfriend Sergey (Rupert Friend) for a weekend away. The couples sip wine and share their meet-cute stories, with Iris revealing that she and Josh had a picturesque chance meeting in the produce section at the grocery store, the kind of painfully adorable plotline usually reserved for Hallmark Original Movies. And thatโs because it never happened; the encounter was chosen by Josh to be part of the coupleโs narrative. Everything Iris knows is something sheโs been programmed to believe or something her limited intelligence settings have been permitted to learn from the internet โ like the weather forecast for the day.
Sophie Thatcher has made a name for herself in the horror world thanks to Yellowjackets, The Boogeyman, MaXXXine, and Heretic, but Companion is her finest performance yet. Iris is a commanding role that requires her to walk the line between human and android, her personality and skillset shifting constantly as her settings adjust. In lesser hands, Iris would be difficult to empathize with, but Thatcherโs delivery puts the audience on her side from the very beginning. The crown of Good For Her horror cinema has been passed on, and Thatcher now reigns as our queen for 2025.
Jack Quaid remains one of the horror genreโs most consistent presences, weaponizing his โAw, shucksโ sensibilities into a character we hope will deservedly get his shit rocked before the credits roll. Harvey Guillรฉn and Lukas Gage bring much of the filmโs best chuckles because, despite its heavy themes and graphic violence, Companion never forgets to be laugh-out-loud hilarious. Hancock has perfected the dance of shifting tones, earning every bit of the โfrom the studio that brought you The Notebook, and the creators of Barbarian,โ endorsements. Sleek, savvy, and packed with effective scares, whoever said January was a dumping ground for horror movies is a fool, because Companion has set the bar as the best horror film of the year (so far).
Horror is no stranger to tales of robot girlfriends, with Wes Cravenโs Deadly Friend featuring a young boy reviving his crush by putting his robotโs consciousness in her corpse, and of course, everyoneโs new bestie M3GAN, but Companionโs true power is that itโs grounded in a Twilight Zone-esque sense of realism that feels like an inevitability. This isnโt just a fun horror movie, itโs a warning of what is to come to those who foolishly believe the cure to the โmale loneliness epidemicโ is programmable sexbots and government-issued girlfriends. Be careful what you wish for, incels, because the monkeyโs paw will curl for you too, and youโll deserve it.
ChatGPT already offers AI girlfriend chatbots, life-sized sex dolls are getting more realistic by the day, and as the comedic performance art special Courtney Pauroso: Vanessa 5000 warned us last year, weโre inching closer and closer to a reality where AI companions will become indistinguishable from actual women.
If this is to be our future, I hope it plays out like Companion.

