Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

  

share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
About the movie
Astro Boy
Genre:
Action, Adventure; Animation; Family, Children's; SciFi, Fantasy
MPAA rating:
PG
for some action and peril, and brief mild language
Running time:
01:34
Release date:
2009
Rating:
Cast:
Kristen Bell; Samuel L. Jackson; Matt Lucas; Bill Nighy; Freddie Highmore; Charlize Theron; Donald Sutherland; Nathan Lane; Nicholas Cage
Directed by:
David Bowers
On the web:
 
Astro Boy Official Site
More Reviews
 
Robots go through the motions
NOW SHOWING
= Buy movie tickets online
Check theaters for showtimes
Philadelphia, PA
 
AMC Franklin Mills Mall 14 (Byberry)
 
UA Riverview Stadium 17 (Italian Market - Southwark)
Bucks, PA
 
AMC Neshaminy 24 (Bensalem)
 
Regal Warrington Crossing 22 (Warrington)
Chester, PA
 
Regal Downingtown 16 (Downingtown)
 
AMC Painter's Crossing 9 (West Chester)
Montgomery, PA
 
Regal Plymouth Meeting 10 (Conshohocken)
 
AMC 309 Cinema 9 (North Wales)
Burlington, NJ
 
Regal Burlington Cinema 20 (Burlington)
 
AMC Marlton 8 (Marlton)
Camden, NJ
 
AMC Loews Cherry Hill 24 (Cherry Hill)
 
Cinemark Movies 16 - Somerdale (Somerdale)
Gloucester, NJ
 
UA Washington Township 14 (Sewell)
 
AMC Deptford Mall 6 (Woodbury)
Mercer, NJ
 
AMC Hamilton 24 (Mercerville)
READER FEEDBACK


'Astro Boy' finally flies

"Astro Boy" is based on a popular Japanese cartoon from the 1950s that's lived several lives on television, and now makes the jump to the big screen.

That's the official lineage - unofficially, it borrows from Disney, Dickens, H.G. Wells, Brad Bird and dozens of other sources, and normally all that borrowing ain't good (just look at the value of the U.S. dollar).

And indeed, the first 20 minutes of "Astro Boy," in which a boy is killed in his father's botched lab experiment, are enough to make you wish you were next door in "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs."

The animation is lackluster, the movie fumbles for a right tone, and it just doesn't have the depth to handle something as weighty as the death of a child.

Or the grief of a father (Nicolas Cage), a scientist who tries to resurrect his son by constructing a cyborg replica programmed with his son's memory and personality, a Pinnochio for the space age.

The movie sits there like a misbegotten lump until Astro Boy (Freddie Highmore), as he comes to be known, leaves his family and stratospheric city for the pile of rubble on the planet below where cast-off humans scratch out a living among the trash.

It's there the movie begins to come alive, so to speak, as lifelike Astro Boy takes up with a band of human scavengers. They all work for a Fagin-like salvager (Nathan Lane), scouring massive garbage heaps for robot parts to be used in gladiatorial matches featuring rebuilt machines.

The human mistreatment of robots is a key plot point and theme - it prompts Astro Boy to pretend he's a real boy, and serves as an ironic reflection of the tension between the surface humans and those who live in the clouds, a privileged society run by a warlike president.

Third-act conflict brought about by the president's PR war on the refugees and robots below is contrived and a little too pointed, but it yields some decent action sequences.

The movie never soars like Astro Boy, but it does rise above the lack of promise that prevails in the early scenes, which is a tough thing for any movie to do.

 

Be the first in line! Find local theaters, view listings and purchase tickets.
Search by theater name, city or zip code.