I, Robot
dir. Proyas

Opens Fri July 16

Various Theaters

When 20th Century Fox decided to adapt Isaac Asimovโ€™s canonical but nearly unadaptable science fiction text I, Robot, they came up with an utterly unsurprising solution: ditch Asimovโ€™s philosophy and scien

ce, swipe his title, and insert a bankable star. Throw in some slick action sequences and cutting-edge CG, and youโ€™ve got your adaptation.

The surprise, however, is when one realizes how well this tactic works. While the film version of I, Robot might be a really dumb version of Asimovโ€™s book, itโ€™s also probably the smartest action movie of the summer.

The film opens in 2035, with robots thoroughly engrained in society. In a smart opening sequence, director Alex Proyas seamlessly works robots into city streetsโ€”they walk dogs, carry groceries, even sprint home to retrieve their asthmatic ownerโ€™s forgotten inhaler. Not everyone is keen on mankindโ€™s cybernetic dependence, howeverโ€”namely Detective Del Spooner (Will Smith). But Spoonerโ€™s misgivings are validated when the designer of the robots ends up dead, apparently killed by his latest robotic creation.

None of that happens in the book, by the way, but thatโ€™s the solid thing about Jeff Vintar and Akiva Goldsmanโ€™s screenplayโ€”borrowing from Asimov when appropriate, it also develops a story of its own. Proyas, who demonstrated with Dark City that heโ€™s gifted visually, infuses a fluid inventiveness as he films two hyper-kinetic robots fighting, or sets a precarious action scene hundreds of feet above the ground. Digital Domain and Weta Digital, the two effects houses largely responsible for the CG robots, contribute astonishing work with the iMac-looking robots, bringing them to vivid, often chilling life. Proyas makes these android characters an integral part of the filmโ€™s narrative; if Asimov wrote about manโ€™s relationship with technology, Proyas full-heartedly demonstrates manโ€™s use of technology to tell an exciting story.

Itโ€™s that vigor that hoists I, Robot above standard summer action fare. Thatโ€™s not to say there arenโ€™t flawsโ€”Smithโ€™s Fresh Prince-y charm makes it pretty impossible to believe that Spoonerโ€™s really the paranoid outcast all the other characters keep insisting he is, and the Schwarzenegger-y comebacks Smith shouts feel like they were written by a soundbite-savvy studio CEO. But since those are the filmโ€™s biggest problems, I, Robot is in pretty good shape. Sure, I, Robot isnโ€™t the epochal literary event Asimov had with his book, but it is a strong, enjoyable, and intelligent summer action movieโ€”something thatโ€™s laudable enough on its own grounds.

With honor and distinction, Erik Henriksen served as the executive editor of the Portland Mercury from 2004 to 2020. He can now be found at henriksenactual.com.