3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
So cutesy but so good!!, 12 April 2008
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Author:
Michael DeZubiria (miked32@hotmail.com) from Luoyang, China
I haven't seen Short Circuit for some time now, but it is such a huge
milestone in my childhood that I have to say something about it.
Maturer audiences will have a hard time overlooking some of the
childish nuances of the movie, but it is such a fun and entertaining
family film that all of those things can be easily forgiven. It reminds
me of other wonderful family films like Flight of the Navigator and The
Goonies, that I used to watch over and over when I was a kid. I feel
like I've lost something when I can't think of a single movie now that
I love so much that I will watch it a few times a week. Maybe I just am
more aware of the time involved in watching the same movie over and
over today than I used to be.
Johnny 5 is a robot designed for military use until one day it's struck
by lightning and, apparently, comes to life. This is a pretty tired
formula, something man-made suddenly displaying life-like qualities and
wanting to be recognized as a real boy, but it's accompanied by some
clever messages about the advancement of technology, particularly
technology designed to replace humans, which has always been seen as a
bit of a dangerous idea, criticized brilliantly by everyone from
Charlie Chaplin to James Cameron.
Johnny 5's adventures involve his efforts to avoid capture by the
people who made him ("NOVA! No!!"), while at the same time trying to
prove to the world that he's a living entity now. They could not make a
movie like this today. Sadly, CGI has forever replaced the need to
create a physical robot like the one that plays Johnny 5 in this movie,
so any Short Circuit that was made today would just be some soul-less
digital effect cavorting across the screen, instantly forgettable. But
here, he's really there, and he's heavy and clumsy and metallic, but so
memorable as a movie character that I've recently read that the actual
robot prop was sold for something like $500,000. Now THAT is a fan!
Steve Guttenberg and Ally Sheedy have a cute chemistry on screen that
is satisfactorily simple. They are both cookie-cutter caricatures,
Sheedy the lonely Stephanie, who drives an ice-cream truck for a
living, and Guttenberg plays a scientist named Newton, who works for
the evil NOVA but who only needs a cute ice-cream lady and a charming
robot to change his evil ways.
Sound like fun? No? Well, it is, trust me. The film has definitely
dated, but I'll take special effects that look dated 20 years later
over expensive CGI that never looked real in the first place any day. A
lot of films claim to be fun for all ages, but Short Circuit is one of
the few that really is. It's too bad that movies like this seem to be
gone forever now
.
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