Robots (2005)

reviewed by
Ray Wong


Robots

© 2005 Ray Wong (http://reelreviews.blogspot.com)

Stars: Ewan McGregor, Robin Williams, Halle Berry, Jim Broadbent, Mel

Brooks, Amanda Bynes, Drew Carey, Greg Kinnear, Jennifer Coolidge, Paul

Giamatti, Stanley Tucci, Dianne Wiest, Harland Williams

Directors: Chris Wedge, Carlos Saldanha

Writers: Lowell Ganz, Babaloo Mandel, Jim McClain (story), Ron Mita

(story)
Distributor: Fox

MPAA Rating: PG for brief language and crude humor

Running time: 91 minutes
Script - 5
Performance - 6
Direction - 6
Animation - 8
Music/Sound- 6
Editing - 7
Production - 8
Total Score - 6.4 of 10

The "I" in this ROBOTS stands for "eye" candy. The (voice-over)

star-studded fair from 20th Century Fox happens in a familiar,

civilized world devoid of any human beings, much like last year's

SHARK TALES.

"Made" by dish-washer Herb Copperbottom (Tucci) and his wife

(Wiest), son Rodney (McGregor) is an aspiring inventor. After many

failed attempts, Rodney finally invents something useful, and he's

ready to leave for the big city to find his fortune with Bigweld

Industries, the haven for inventors. When Rodney arrives, however, he

is turned away like a pest. Dejected, he makes friends with an eclectic

group of misfits who call themselves the "Rusties," among them

hyperactive Fender (Williams), spunky Piper (Bynes), goofy Crank

(Carey), and "posteriorly endowed" Aunt Fanny (Coolidge).

Soon Rodney discovers Mr. Bigweld (Brooks) no longer runs Bigweld

Industries. Instead, ambitious CEO Ratchet (Kinnear) aims at taking

over the company for good, and turning huge profits by forcing every

robot to either upgrade or become an "out-mod." Worse, out-mods

would be swept away and turned into scrap metal by his evil mother

Madame Gasket (Broadbent).

Unable to afford the upgrades or find replacement parts, many robots

are on the verge of becoming scrap metal, including Rodney's father.

Using his skills, Rodney manages to fix the 'bots that come to him

for help. But he can only fix so many robots at a time. With the help

of sympathetic Bigweld executive Cappy (Berry), Rodney finds Mr.

Bigweld and tries to convince him to come out of retirement and take

his company back from Ratchet. That doesn't sit well with Madame

Gasket and Ratchet, and they're out to destroy Rodney and the gang.

The long list of voice-over talents in this film is staggering.

McGregor (STAR WARS) lends his spirited voice as Rodney. Williams (THE

FINAL CUT) gives some of his most outrageous readings and adlibs ever

since his genie in the 1992 ALADDIN. He's simply hilarious. Broadbent

(BRIDGET JONES) is creepy as the voice of Madame Gasket (there seems to

be a trend for males doing female voices these days). Kinnear (GODSEND)

is interesting as the narcissistic Ratchet. The rest of the cast all

perform well in their relatively minor roles, especially Giamatti

(SIDEWAYS) - his Tim the Gate Guard is funny, wicked, cute, cruel,

and awful at the same time. (*rant* this guy was seriously robbed of an

Oscar nomination, man!)

It's almost impossible to list all the celebrity voices in this film,

and that's part of the problem. There are way too many characters,

many of them minor. There seems to be a "who is who" or "blink

and you'll miss them" joke every few minutes. Part of the real

problem is the busy, unfocused and frantic script. There is almost no

downtime. The fast-paced story does a fine job entertaining the

youngsters, but it becomes exhausting for the adults after a while. The

climatic "battle" and the happy ending are loud and borderline

obnoxious. The story itself is tried and true, thus predictable. An

animated feature doesn't have to be dumb and frantic. Fox should

learn a thing or two from the folks at Pixar, who continue to give us

smart, witty, sophisticated stories and characters without boring the

entire family.

That said, the visuals and animation of ROBOTS are top-notch. The

high-energy action and editing serve the film well. The animation is

colorful, smooth and complex. The mechanical nature of the inanimate

robots as people also creates a fun universe, where babies are

"assembled" and they grow by having upgrades, where one can get an

instant sex change by swapping gender-specific parts, where cities turn

into junkyards and transportation systems work like toys. There are

many really, really cool ideas and entertaining eye candies in this

film, as well as subtle satire. For example, one can't help but

speculate the implication of the Bigweld-Ratchet relationship (do we

hear the names Walt and Michael?) While the story is its weakest link,

the lively animation and spirited voice performances help save the film

from being robotic and dull.
==========
X-RAMR-ID: 39574
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1370735
X-RT-TitleID: 10003302
X-RT-SourceID: 1664
X-RT-AuthorID: 11500
X-RT-RatingText: 6.4/10

The review above was posted to the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup (de.rec.film.kritiken for German reviews).
The Internet Movie Database accepts no responsibility for the contents of the review and has no editorial control. Unless stated otherwise, the copyright belongs to the author.
Please direct comments/criticisms of the review to relevant newsgroups.
Broken URLs inthe reviews are the responsibility of the author.
The formatting of the review is likely to differ from the original due to ASCII to HTML conversion.

Related links: index of all rec.arts.movies.reviews reviews