What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that this animated robot superhero
adventure based on the 1960s anime series
Astro Boy is age-appropriate for elementary-schoolers.
It has fairly sophisticated themes (grief, loss, and war), as
well as plenty of cartoon action violence -- including the
death of a child, the destruction of several robots,
explosions, and robots armed with heavy artillery. But language
is limited to mild insults like "idiot," and there's no product
placement to worry about. A war-obsessed military man is
presented as a humorously negative character; on the opposite
end of the political spectrum is a trio of revolutionary robots
who call each other "comrade" and have a poster of Lenin in
their meeting place.
ASTRO BOY chronicles the adventures of a weaponized robot (voiced by Freddie Highmore) created by grieving scientist Dr. Tenma (Nicolas Cage) in the exact likeness of his deceased son, Toby. The distraught scientist, whose son died during a dangerous demonstration for Metro City's war-mongering General Stone (Donald Sutherland), allows Astro Boy to believe that he's really Toby ... until the boy accidentally falls out of a window and realizes he can fly. Escaping from a now-remorseful Dr. Tenma before he can shut him down, Astro Boy lands in the "garbage heap" below Metro City that is the over-polluted Earth. He runs into a band of orphans led by Cora (Kristen Bell) and Sludge (Moises Arias), who live with Ham Egg (Nathan Lane), a seemingly kind pseudo-adoptive father who runs a Coliseum-like show where robots battle to the death. When Astro Boy is outed as a robot, he must fight for his life again -- and summon the courage to save everyone from General Stone's nefarious plans to start a bloody war.
Director David Bowers ( Flushed Away) isn't revolutionary in his approach to animation, but he has a keen eye for action sequences and for capturing the comedy and tragedy of a robot who thinks he's a boy who realizes he's a superhero. Highmore has the perfectly sweet, emotive voice to play Astro Boy, and Cage sounds appropriately haunted as Dr. Tenma, who really just wants his son back. The scene-stealers are Sutherland and Lane, both of whom provide the movie's laughs by playing their characters as amusing and incredibly twisted egomaniacs.
Equal parts AI, Pinocchio, and WALL-E, Astro Boy strongly recalls each with its themes of a robot clone made for a grieving parent, an artificial boy wanting to become real, and the scary prospect of a future in which Earth becomes nearly uninhabitable and people must live somewhere else completely dependent on technology. But kids will be mostly unaware of these heavier themes, except for those who understand the obvious allusion to Pinocchio. Older viewers will get a kick out of the deceitful, hawkish General Stone, whose campaign slogans ("It's Not Time for Change") and outright desire for war are reminiscent of George C. Scott's General Turgidson in Dr. Strangelove. Astro Boy may not launch a thousand sequels, but its humor and boy-friendly superhero premise make for an entertaining diversion.
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