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A corporate risk-management consultant sent to a remote, top-secret location must decide whether or not to terminate a bioengineered child who presents a mystery of both infinite promise and incalculable danger.
A B-movie with pretension to high-minded inquiry, addressing artificial life and the sanctity of human existence, but when the story actually engages with the themes the only outcome is a reductive body count and artful blood splatter on concrete.
Morgan is an unassuming little thriller, nicely put together and engaging enough while you're watching, though its memory is likely to vaporize hours, or even minutes, after you've seen it.
Even I, a self-prescribed horror movie skeptic, found myself wrapped up in Morgan - I was invested in the characters, I (mostly) bought into the plot and even found myself embracing some of the gore by the end.
"What is Morgan?" the film's marketing campaign has been asking for weeks. Turns out, Morgan is just another sci-fi film that's only engineered to disappoint.