‘Meet the Robinsons’ is 3-D eye candy
Story feels 2-D, but the film has glorious visuals and you get cool glasses
![]() Walt Disney Pictures Lewis Robinson (voiced by Jordan Fry) and his friend from the future Wilbur Robinson (voiced by Spencer Fox) try to find Lewis' mom in "Meet the Robinsons." |
Slideshow |
November movies The “Twilight” sequel, “New Moon” hits the big screen, along with George Clooney in “The Men Who Stare at Goats” and “Fantastic Mr. Fox” and the apocalyptic “2012” and “The Road.” more photos |
Video: Celebrity interviews |
Lautner talks fame and 'New Moon' Nov. 16: Actor Taylor Lautner talks about preparing for his role in the highly anticipated new movie, "Twilight: New Moon," and the pressures of fame. |
There’s been such an onslaught of animated movies over the past year or so, it only feels like they’re coming at you in 3-D.
“Meet the Robinsons” actually does, and it’s one of the more tolerable of the genre in recent memory.
Thankfully, it doesn’t consist of smart-alecky talking animals spewing one-liners and pop culture references. And the digital three-dimensional effects are pretty spectacular. A lot of times with this technology, it’s too easy to zing and fling things at the audience, simply because you can. It’s gratuitous — and yes, we’re talking to you, Robert Rodriguez. The most recent “Spy Kids” movie is a prime example of this.
|
The script itself, however — credited to seven people — is strictly two-dimensional. Based on the book “A Day With Wilbur Robinson” by William Joyce, the film follows the adventures of young Lewis (voiced by Daniel Hansen), a bespectacled boy whose mother left him at an orphanage when he was an infant. Being the science geek and aspiring inventor that he is, he creates a memory scanner in with the hope of going back and finding his mother. (Never mind his father, who’s never mentioned.)
Instead, Lewis winds up in the future, having been whisked away by his new friend, Wilbur Robinson (Wesley Singerman). There, Wilbur’s family of misfits and weirdoes offers to take him in. (Adam West and Tom Selleck are among the actors lending their voices, with Angela Bassett as the head of the orphanage. “Meet the Robinsons” also happens to be mercifully free of the distracting stunt casting that marks so many of these movies.)
|
It’s hard to feel too emotionally engaged by any of this, but easy to watch. Kids will probably be sufficiently entertained, and adults can just sit back and enjoy the eye candy. Plus you get these cool, dark glasses that make anyone who wears them look like Roy Orbison.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM AT THE MOVIES |
| Add At the movies headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide




