Robots with Ewan McGregor: DVD Cover
  • Cover Image

Robots Director: Carlos Saldanha, Chris Wedge Cast: Ewan McGregor, Halle Berry, Robin Williams, Greg Kinnear

DVD - Pan & Scan Learn more

BUY THIS ITEM

  • $14.99 Online price
    $13.49 Member price
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=024543193845&productCode=DV&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

Enter a zip code

  • DVD Release Date: 09/27/2005
  • Rating: Rated PG
  • Sales Rank: 7,064

Viewer Rating: (6 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Cartoon-fans" See All

More Formats 
DVD - Wide Screen$14.99
DVD - Wide Screen / DTS$14.99
DVD$14.99
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Scenes

Features

Audio commentary by director Chris Wedge and executive producer William Joyce; audio commentary by head technical directors and animation heads; "Discontinued Parts" (deleted scenes) with directorıs commentary; all-new Xbox exclusive multiplayer racing game featuring never-before-seen tracks, gameplay modes and gadgets where players can race as one of several characters from Robots; interactive games including Robot Dance, Invent-A-Bot and a Fender Photo Shoot; The Blue Man Group featurette; "You Can Shine No Matter What Youıre Made Of" character inspiration featurette; the original Robots short, the short that sold the concept to the studio with directorıs commentary; Ice Age 2 promotional short; exclusive inside look at the making of Ice Age 2; DVD-Rom link; TV spots; trailers.

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Robots
1. Rivet Town's Newest Arrival [2:03]
2. The Copperbottom Boy (Main Titles) [2:20]
3. The World Of Bigweld [2:16]
4. The Inventor [:36]
5. Follow Your Dream [3:33]
6. Robot City [2:18]
7. The Crosstown Express [:25]
8. Those Days Are Over [2:18]
9. Rodney Drops In [3:11]
10. Magnetic Personality [:34]
11. Madame Gasket [3:03]
12. Scroungers [2:01]
13. Outmoded [1:25]
14. The Rusties [:35]
15. Aunt Fanny's Boarding House [2:39]
16. Repairs By Rodney [3:09]
17. Going To The Bigweld Ball [:30]
18. Troublemaker [1:54]
19. Looking For Mr. Bigweld [1:49]
20. Fender Under Fire [1:19]
21. Dad's Advice [2:55]
22. Bigweld's Back! [4:04]
23. Rodney On The Run [:46]
24. Robot Rebellion [3:47]
25. See a Need, Fill a Need [2:49]
26. My Right-Hand Bot [1:09]
27. Get Up Offa That Thing [5:21]
28. End Titles [:04]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

From the creators of the hit animated film Ice Age comes a new spin on the coming-of-age story: the tale of a young, starry-eyed...robot. Rodney Copperbottom (the near-unrecognizable voice of Ewan McGregor) is a genius teenage inventor from a little town who wants nothing more than to travel to Robot City to seek his fortune at Bigweld Industries, the home to the greatest inventor of them all, the reclusive Bigweld (Mel Brooks). Rodney has big dreams, and after creating Wonderbot -- a flying 'bot made of kitchen parts -- he embarks on his journey to the big city. But after arriving, he discovers that achieving his dream may be a lot harder than he realized. First, he can't get hired at Bigweld Industries, because the company has some new employees: Cappy (Halle Berry), the beautiful, sleek 'bot who becomes the object of Rodney's affection, and the corporate tyrant Ratchet (Greg Kinnear), who is on a mission to stop supplying parts to the older robots of the city by creating newer -- and more expensive -- robot models. Then, when Rodney has nowhere to live, he's befriended by the misfit Rusties: Fender (the typically zany Robin Williams), a 'bot who's continually losing pieces of himself; Piper (Amanda Bynes), Fender's kid sister; Crank Casey (Drew Carey), the pessimist of the group; Lug (Harland Williams), the slow-witted gentle giant; Diesel, the Harpo Marx-like robot without a voice box; and Aunt Fanny (Jennifer Coolidge), the kindhearted mother figure of the bunch. When Rodney discovers what Ratchet is trying to do, he and his friends decide to put a stop to it by finding Bigweld and bringing him back to restore the company.

Coming up with a new way to tell this type of tale is never easy, but screenwriters Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel, veterans of TV comedy, pull this off perfectly. In the film we see Rodney growing up, and several sequences are extremely clever in dealing with the aging of a robot: His parents actually put Rodney together from parts in a box; when the youngster starts to cry, his father turns down his volume knob; and we see Rodney grow older as he slowly adds on parts handed down from his older cousins. Of course, the film wouldn't be as visually appealing as it is without the talents of Blue Sky Studios, the animation company that was responsible for Ice Age. Working from designs by children's illustrator William Joyce (who created Rollie Pollie Olie) Blue Sky spent almost three years on design work alone, doing everything from creating the main character (who was inspired by an outboard motor) to creating a computer algorithm that could automatically spread rust on surfaces. Using a computer technology that allowed the animators to render the environments as if they were working with real lights on a set, they were able to animate approximately three seconds of film per week. The entire film took over two years to completely animate, using a process called "rigging," which provides a sort of bone structure over a character that an animator can then manipulate. Each facial movement -- from the twitch of an eyebrow to a grin -- is done individually. And that's only one step in the complicated process of storyboards, voice recording, lighting effects, and post-production that brought Robots to life. And to see the attention to detail offered by these animators, keep an eye out for a close-up of the dial on Rodney's chest: You'll see the Blue Sky logo! But to fully appreciate the process, you need to check out the extras on Robots, which include commentary from technical directors and animation heads, a featurette that describes what inspired the creation of the characters, and much more. Christina Urban, Barnes & Noble

More reviews and recommendations

Customer Reviews

Great, funny movieby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

July 04, 2009: Really cute, great characters. fun for adults too!

great movieby Dunn1inc

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

December 02, 2008: this movie had my daughter finding all kinds of things around the house that she could make stuff with. it's pretty good.


More Customer Reviews