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The Three Laws
of Robotics:
1. A robot may not injure a human being,
or through inaction, allow a human being
to come to harm.
2. A robot must obey orders given it
by human beings except where such orders
would conflict with the First Law.
3. A robot must protect its own existence
as long as such protection does not conflict
with the First or Second Law.
Such are the rules put forth by author
Isaac Asimov in his collection of short
stories. Each of the nine stories that make
up the original work challenges these rules,
and presents a mystery of sorts to figure
out how they went wrong. Though I am not
a huge fan of Asimov’s work (which
is by no means a testament to the quality
of the man’s work, it’s just
personal taste on my part), I have read
it and have seen several attempts to film
it. Most succeed on some level, but few
truly capture the true spirit of the original
work.
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When I first heard about the big screen adaptation
of “I,Robot”, I was intrigued. I wondered
if there was a chance that someone might finally…
get it right. The news that Alex Proyas was set
to direct it, certainly gave me hope that the
film would be at the very least, a visual treat.
Proyas did such a great job with “The Crow”
a few years back, which still stands as a favorite
movie of mine. But then, the bombshell…
The film would star Will Smith… hmmmmm…
Keeping in mind that I do recognize the box office
draw that Smiith has become and that I do enjoy
his films immensely (with the exception of the
ultra-horrible “Wild Wild West”),
I just couldn’t imagine “I,Robot”
as a big summer action blockbuster. The main story
I was familiar with is a much quieter, rather
psychological piece. That said, I avoided it at
the theatre. What I didn’t think to do,
was simply to disassociate the movie totally from
the original work and go see it anyway. Big mistake
on my part.
I popped in the DVD last week to finally check
it out and I am shocked to say that I loved it.
That’s right, I loved it. It was big, it
was loud, and the special effects were for the
most part, terrific. Again, I had to disassociate
the original work completely from what I was seeing,
and let the eye-candy commence. After it was over,
all I could think was that I wish I had seen it
in the theatre. Thankfully, I finally made the
plunge last month and added a big screen TV to
our house, so at least I got to see it in 65”
of glorious widescreen. But still, there’s
something to be said about a 75’ theatre
screen.
What surprised me the most about the film was
that I had to agree with a comment co-worker of
mine made the day the DVD arrived. He was surprised
that I hadn’t seen it, and at the time I
was still very hesitant. My co-worker is a big
sci-fi guy and he was prepared to hate the film
when he first saw it. But he said to me (quote),
“It wasn’t as mind-numbingly stupid
as I expected it to be.” (end quote) I looked
at him rather incredulously, but he assured me
that was how he felt. Now that I have seen it
for myself, let me that he was 100% correct. In
spite of the big budget action pretense, it’s
not at all mind-numbingly stupid. The storyline,
which involved the investigation of a murder supposedly
committed by a robot, was as solid as it was entertaining.
Granted, Will Smith didn’t really stretch
his acting muscles as he played the same kind
of smart-alecky cop he’s known for, but
he still did a good enough so as not to distract
from the entire movie. And I would like to give
a special nod to Alan Tudyk (who was great as
‘Wash’ in ‘Firefly”),
for his performance as ‘Sonny.’ Much
like Andy Serkis’ role as Gollum in the
“Lord of the Rings” trilogy, you never
get to really ‘see’ Tudyk. He provides
the voice for the robot in question, but his physical
performance also provided the animation reference
for the CGI artists who created Sonny.
I can finally start to comment a little more on
the visual aspects of some of these DVD releases,
since I added the big screen, and I have to say
the DVD release of “I, Robot” appears
technically flawless in its presentation. The
picture is always sharp, and the colors especially
vibrant.
I did expect more in the way of special features,
since this was such a special effects driven film,
but what few there were I found okay. The commentary
by director Proyas and screenwriter Akiva Goldsman
was fairly interesting, while the ‘Making
of…’ was way too short, coming in
just over ten minutes.
It’s not often that my original perception
of an upcoming film is wrong, but when I love
it when I am. “I,Robot”, while not
the best movie ever, surprised me by being much,
much better than I expected. (And it wasn’t
mind-numbingly stupid…)
Directed by: Alex Proyas
Starring: Will Smith, Bridget Moynahan, Bruce
Greenwood, James Cromwell, Chi McBride, Alan Tudyk,
Extras: Commentary by Director Alex Proyas and
Screenwriter Akiva Goldsman. The Making of I,
Robot, Still Gallery
Specifications: Widescreen (2.35:1), Dolby Digital
5.1 Surround Sound
Studio: Fox
Release Date: 10/14/2004
Region 1
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Website
We'll give I, Robot a B+.
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