
In ‘Mountainhead,' billionaire tech bros watch world burn
At the beginning of 'Mountainhead,' written and directed by Jesse Armstrong of 'Succession' fame and premiering Saturday on HBO, three multibillionaire tech bros make their way by private plane, helicopter and SUV caravan to join a fourth in a big modernist house on an isolated, snowy mountaintop for a weekend of poker and drugs — 'no deals, no meals, no high heels.' One might wish for an avalanche, were there anything higher to fall on them.
Venis (Cory Michael Smith), the world's richest man — imagine Musk, Bezos and Zuckerberg put in a blender, as perhaps you have — commands a social media site with, wait for it, 4 billion subscribers, and has just released new 'content tools' that allow for super high-res 'unfalsifiable deepfakes.' As a result, the sectarian world is going up in flames. Jeff (Ramy Youssef), a rival who had poached members of Venis' team, has an AI algorithm capable of filtering out the bad information which Venis, closing the digital barn door after the cow is out, wants to acquire; but Jeff, for reasons of profit, power and/or ego, is not going to let it go.
Randall (Steve Carell), their gray-haired guru — they call him 'Papa Bear,' though Jeff also dubs him 'Dark Money Gandalf' — controls a lot of international infrastructure, including military. Preoccupied with his mortality — told by his latest oncologist that his cancer is incurable, he responds, 'You are not a very intelligent person' — he's hoping to upload his consciousness to the grid, a possibility Venis assures him is only five years off as long as he can get his hands on Jeff's AI. The relatively inoffensive Hugo (Jason Schwartzman), whose house it is, hopes to expand the meditation app he created, into a lifestyle super app — offering 'posture correction, therapy and a brand new color' — with his friends' investment of 'a b-nut,' i.e., a billion dollars. They call him 'Souper,' for 'soup kitchen,' because he is worth only $521 million. He's the runt of the litter, and the comedy relief. For no given reason, they call themselves the Brewsters — perhaps just so they can crow 'cock-a-doodle-brew.' They are full of themselves — 'The great thing about me,' says Randall, 'is that I know everyone and do everything' — and basically insecure.
They rewrite their fundamental nihilism into the belief that their business is good for mankind, whatever the actual human cost. 'You're always going to get some people dead,' Randall says. 'Nothing means anything,' Venis says, 'and everything's funny and cool.' (But he does miss his mother and, in a particularly creepy interlude, his baby is brought up the mountain for an uncomfortable minute.) In the only scene to take them out of the house, the four travel to the crest of a mountain, where Hugo writes each man's net worth in lipstick on his chest, they don hierarchical headgear and shout, 'Mountain god accelerator legacy manifestation!' into the valley below, each adding a wish. It is, seemingly, something they have done before.
Randall name-checks philosophers — Hegel, Kant, Nietzsche, Plato, Marcus Aurelius — he misunderstands to his advantage and drops references to the Catiline Conspiracy and the Battle of Actium to make base actions sound important and dignified. He calls the president a 'simpleton' — one assumes Armstrong is reflecting on the current one — but for all their power, money and influence, they all lack wisdom. And if recent years have taught us anything, it's that these things are not mutually exclusive.
Venis thinks the violence engulfing the globe, which cannot touch him, may prove cathartic; Randall is 'excited about these atrocities.' They discuss taking over 'failing nations' to 'show them how it's done.' (In perhaps the film's funniest line, Hugo, who has been working on his house, muses, 'I don't know if I want to run Argentina on my own — not on the back of a major construction project.') They trade in gobbledygook phrases like 'AI dooming and decelerationist alarmism,' 'compound distillation effect' and 'bootstrap to a corporate monarchy, cyber-state it to the singularity, eat the chaos,' which for all I know is just Armstrong quoting things people of this sort have actually said. It seems possible.
Tribune News Servicea

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