Good-looking

Humberto 2021-11-18 08:01:28

The picture quality of "Robot Adventures" can not be described as "impeccable". Originally CG is difficult to make a character, but this time it is even more difficult to make a robot-facial expressions are too real, not real; but if they are too different from real people, they are not vivid, so it is indeed a technique to be precise. Live, but the technical skills of the Blue Sky Studio absolutely didn't say, a pile of scrap copper and rotten iron was shining brilliantly on the screen by them. But technically there is no problem, but the story is really not flattering. A grassroots young man, full of ambitions, went to the city to realize his dream, but he encountered thrills and gained a reunion story of love, which is too ordinary. If the robot is replaced by a real person, and some fairy tale colors are removed, this is a standard version of the "American Dream" story, just a little more tender. Speaking of the "American Dream", this has always been a classic material in the mainstream Western value system. It has been put on the screen countless times, but the "American Dream" in the early years was somewhat reflective and cruel. "The Great Gatsby" is still "Once Upon a Time in America". After reading it, I can't help but feel a little bit sorrowful. The critical realism in it is very strong. When it is bigger, it is "more thoughtful and deeper". And this "Robot Adventure" portrays what was originally a bit cruel, warm and touching, and it also arranges a gag fool and a beauty who appears to fall in love with the protagonist and is loved by the protagonist in a timely manner. How do you say? Maybe only the children are satisfied, but if you are over 16 years old, it is hard to say that this is not a film that insults your wisdom.

View more about Robots reviews

Extended Reading

Robots quotes

  • Darth Vader: [on voice box, which Diesel puts in] The force is strong in this one.

    [Vader's signature breath]

  • Fender: We've told you a hundred times...

    [Talks with his hand]

    Fender: Don't talk to strange men. Thank you, Manuel.

    Piper: I talk to you. Who's stranger than that?