Bicentennial Man movie review (1999) | Roger Ebert (2024)

Reviews

Bicentennial Man movie review (1999) | Roger Ebert (1)

Now streaming on:

"Bicentennial Man" begins with promise, proceeds in fits and starts, and finally sinks into a cornball drone of greeting-card sentiment.

Robin Williams spends the first half of the film encased in a metallic robot suit, and when he emerges, the script turns robotic instead. What a letdown.

Williams plays a robobutler named Andrew, who arrives in a packing crate one day outside the home of a family who is destined to share him for four generations, each and every moment of which seems mercilessly chronicled. His first owner is Sir (Sam Neill), who introduces Andrew to a dubious wife (Wendy Crewson) and a daughter named Little Miss, who grows up to be played by Embeth Davidtz (she also plays her own granddaughter).

Advertisem*nt

At first the robot is treated unkindly. "It is a household appliance, yet you treat it like it is a man," an associate frets to Sir. It's clear from the first that Andrew is some kind of variant, smarter and more "human" than your average robot, although just as literal.

In the early scenes, which have a life of their own, Andrew jumps out a window when told and has a lot of trouble mastering the principle of the "knock-knock" joke. He also demonstrates various consequences of the Three Laws of Robotics, which were obviously devised by Isaac Asimov so that men of the future will be able to shout "gotcha!" at their robots.

From the first moment we see Andrew, we're asking ourselves, is that really Robin Williams inside the polished aluminum shell? USA Today claims it is, although at times we may be looking at a model or a computer-generated graphic. The robot's body language is persuasive; it has that same subtle courtliness that Williams himself often uses. Andrew also has good timing, which is crucial, since many of the movie's payoffs depend on the robot expressing its feelings through body language. ("One would like to have more expression," Andrew complains at one point. "One has thoughts and feelings that presently do not show.") Peter Weller, who starred in "RoboCop," told me it was the most excruciating physical ordeal of his lifetime, spending weeks inside a heavy costume under movie lights that raised the temperature to more than 100 degrees. Williams must have undergone a similar ordeal. His performance depends on the comic principle that it's funny when a man is subjected to the rules of a machine; everything we see here has its mirror image in the assembly-line sequence at the beginning of Chaplin's "Modern Times." Unfortunately for this movie, it's funnier when a man becomes a machine than when a machine becomes a man, because man's free will is being subverted, while the machine has none.

The plot is based on a story by Asimov and a novel by Asimov and Robert Silverberg. It deals with the poignancy of an android that has humanlike feelings and must live indefinitely, while all the humans must die. There are consolations. Andrew is allowed to bank his own income and compound interest can work wonders for an immortal being; eventually he is rich, and goes on an odyssey to find a soul mate.

His search leads to the shabby laboratory of Rupert Burns (Oliver Platt), who tinkers with used robots, and the two of them fashion a new body for Andrew that looks much like Robin Williams. There is also the problem of finding Andrew a soul mate. Will it be an advanced robot, or will his own progress make it plausible for him to consider a relationship with a human? Andrew can't reproduce, of course, but logic suggests he might make a versatile and tireless lover.

Advertisem*nt

The movie's buried themes have to do with self-determination and the rights of the individual. Like many of Asimov's robot stories, it deals with the enigma of having the intelligence of a man, without the rights or the feelings. "Bicentennial Man" could have been an intelligent, challenging science fiction movie, but it's too timid, too eager to please. It wants us to like Andrew, but it is difficult at a human deathbed to identify with the aluminum mourner.

Strange, how definitely the film goes wrong. At the 60-minute mark, I was really enjoying it. Then it slowly abandons its most promising themes and paradoxes, and turned into a series of slow, soppy scenes involving love and death. And since the beloved woman is essentially always the same person (played by Davidtz) the movie begins to seem very long and very slow, and by the end, when Andrew hopefully says, "See you soon," we hope he is destined for Home Appliance Heaven.

Now playing

I Saw the TV Glow
Robert Daniels

Reverse the Curse
Brian Tallerico

Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F
Brian Tallerico

Fancy Dance
Jourdain Searles

Tuesday
Nell Minow

Diane von Furstenberg: Woman in Charge
Nandini Balial

Film Credits

Bicentennial Man movie review (1999) | Roger Ebert (9)

Bicentennial Man (1999)

Rated PGFor Language and Some Sexual Content

132 minutes

Cast

Robin Williamsas Andrew

Embeth Davidtzas Little Miss/Portia

Sam Neillas Sir

Oliver Plattas Rupert Burns

Kiersten Warrenas Galatea Robotic/Human

Wendy Crewsonas Ma'Am

Directed by

  • Chris Columbus

Written by

  • Nicholas Kazan
  • Robert Silverberg

Latest blog posts

The Forrest Gump Soundtrack Hits Different in the Spotify Era

about 11 hoursago

The Man Behind the Curtain: Robert Towne (1934-2024)

about 16 hoursago

Female Filmmakers In Focus: Agnieszka Holland

about 16 hoursago

The Artful Tenderness of A Quiet Place: Day One

1 dayago

Advertisem*nt

Comments

Advertisem*nt

Advertisem*nt

Bicentennial Man movie review (1999) | Roger Ebert (2024)
Top Articles
How to Repair a Computer: PC Fixes You Can Do Yourself
Wolverine V3 Pro: Wireless Esports Controller for Xbox & PC | Razer United Kingdom
Gortershof in Zaandijk | AlleCijfers.nl
Https Paperlesspay Talx Com Boydgaming
Immobiliare di Felice| Appartamento | Appartamento in vendita Porto San
Mensenlinq: Overlijdensberichten zoeken in 2024
Sigma Aldrich Calculator
The Blind Showtimes Near Merchants Walk Cinemas
Public Agent.502
2014 Can-Am Spyder ST-S
Fkiqx Breakpoints
Lakeport Craigslist
2013 Chevy Sonic Freon Capacity
R/Skinwalker
Las Mejores Tiendas Online en Estados Unidos - Aerobox Argentina
Rocky Bfb Asset
Dcuo Exalted Style
라이키 유출
Restaurant Depot Flyer December 2022
Lighthouse Diner Taylorsville Menu
Laura Houston Wbap
M&T Home Equity Loan Calculator
Www.publicsurplus.com Motor Pool
Beachbodyondemand.com
Los Garroberros Menu
Cric7.Net Ipl 2023
Maven 5X30 Scope
Express-Reisepass beantragen - hamburg.de
Kobe Express Bayside Lakes Photos
Andhrajyoti
Grave Digger Wynncraft
Bakkesmod Preset
Wie funktioniert der Ochama Supermarkt? | Ladenbau.de Ratgeber
Arsenal’s Auston Trusty: Inspired by Ronaldinho, World Cup dreams and Birmingham loan
Weather Radar Jamestown
Nz Herald Obituary Notices
Lol Shot Io Unblocked
NO CLUE: deutsche Übersetzung von NCT 127
10.4: The Ideal Gas Equation
Amazing Lash Bay Colony
Racial Slur Database
Lowlifesymptoms Twitter
Blow Dry Bar Boynton Beach
Netdania.com Gold
Summer Rae on WWE return: Royal Rumble is 'step in the right direction'
Noel Berry's Biography: Age, Height, Boyfriend, Family, Net Worth
Roselli's Pizza Coupons
Circle K Wikipedia
Craigslist Old Forge
Eugenics Apush
Potion To Reset Attributes Conan
Enchiladas Suizas | Mexican Food Recipes, Quick and Easy.
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Tuan Roob DDS

Last Updated:

Views: 5709

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Tuan Roob DDS

Birthday: 1999-11-20

Address: Suite 592 642 Pfannerstill Island, South Keila, LA 74970-3076

Phone: +9617721773649

Job: Marketing Producer

Hobby: Skydiving, Flag Football, Knitting, Running, Lego building, Hunting, Juggling

Introduction: My name is Tuan Roob DDS, I am a friendly, good, energetic, faithful, fantastic, gentle, enchanting person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.