Bicentennial Man (1999)

Rated: ![]()
Starring: Robin Williams
Director: Chris Columbus
Edition Details:
• Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
• Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Dolby
• Theatrical trailer(s)
• Making Of Documentary
• Widescreen anamorphic format
Editorial
Reviews
Bicentennial Man was stung at the 1999 box office,
due no doubt in part to poor timing during a backlash against Robin Williams
and his treacly performances in two other, then-recent releases, Jakob the
Liar and Patch Adams. But this near-approximation of a science
fiction epic, based on works by Isaac Asimov and directed, with
uncharacteristic seriousness of purpose, by Chris Columbus (Mrs. Doubtfire),
is much better than one would have known from the knee-jerk negativity and
box-office indifference.
Williams plays Andrew, a robot programmed
for domestic chores and sold to an upper-middle-class family, the Martins, in
the year 2005. The family patriarch (Sam Neill) recognizes and encourages
Andrew's uncommon characteristics, particularly his artistic streak,
sensitivity to beauty, humor, and independence of spirit. In so doing, he sets
Williams's tin man on a two-century journey to become more human than most
human beings.
As adapted by screenwriter Nicholas Kazan, the movie's scale is novelistic, though Columbus isn't the man to embrace with Spielbergian confidence its sweeping possibilities. Instead, the Home Alone director shakes off his familiar tendencies to pander and matures, finally, as a captivating storyteller. But what really makes this film matter is its undercurrent of deep yearning, the passion of Andrew as a convert to the human race and his willingness to sacrifice all to give and take love. Williams rises to an atypical challenge here as a futuristic Everyman, relying, perhaps for the first time, on his considerable iconic value to make the point that becoming human means becoming more like Robin Williams. Nothing wrong with that. --Tom Keogh