Ex Machina's portrayal of gendered robot perpetuates stereotypes

Image | Ex Machina Ava Robot

Caption: Critics say Ava, the robot in Ex Machina is the latest "lady robot" to be cast in a rather formulaic and all-too-well-worn mold. (Ex Machina, Universal Pictures)

The new sci-fi film Ex Machina(external link) is currently a critical darling on the festival circuit. It tells the story of a young, male computer programmer, who falls in love with a vulnerable and beautiful heroine named Ava. The only glitch is that Ava is a robot.... one he's supposed to be testing.
Clearly, Ava is one alluring robot, which as some critics have noted, makes her just the latest "lady robot" to be cast in a rather formulaic ... and all-too-well-worn mold.
From "female" robots Priss in Blade Runner, Lisa from Weird Science, and Samantha from Her... They're all "female" robots, they are all vulnerable, sexy and more often than not sexualized figures. And examples of "male" robots like HAL from a Space Odyssey, Star Trek's Data and, course, the Terminator are all brain and brawn... guts, guile and genius.
Which is all to suggest that even if you've never paused to compute it before it seems the robots among us are "gendered" along some rigid and traditional lines.
What are your thoughts on our discussion on gendered robots perpetuating stereotypes? Do robots even need a gender?
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This segment was produced by The Current's Marc Apollonio and Sujata Berry.