Dr. Tenma (Nicolas Cage) is the head of the Ministry of Science. One day, while demonstrating a new weapon, there is a horrible accident and his son Toby (Freddie Highmore) gets vaporized. Overcome with grief, Tenma and his colleague/conscience Dr. Elefun (Bill Nighy) construct a perfect robotic recreation of Toby, complete with Toby’s memories and appearance. Of course, Tenma doesn’t tell his son-bot that he’s got super robot powers, so imagine Toby’s surprise when he discovers he can fly. The plot is your standard superhero origin story. Astro Boy discovers he’s Astro Boy, flies around getting used to his rocket boots and machine-gun butt, General Stone and the military wants to make his power source into a weapon, and that sort of thing. This isn’t really a plot movie; this is an action movie for kids. The movie’s world-building and impressively full street scenes speak to director David Bowers’ background in animation. Astro Boy is a whirl of fists and motion when he fights, especially in the last battle with the Peacekeeper. He darts and dives through a gorgeous 2-D world when he flies, and he flies often during several good chase scenes. There’s a lot of movement, and, most of the time, a lot of energy. Even when there’s nothing going on plot-wise, there’s something going on visually to keep the eyes busy. I hate it when a movie has one element that just completely ruins what might have been an otherwise fun experience. For Astro Boy, that element is the completely over-the-top George W. Bush parody character of General Stone. Seriously, every time Stone shows up, it’s to deliver some groaningly bad line about how he’s running for reelection and the best way to get the people to vote for an unpopular candidate is to start some sort of pointless war. I get it, you don’t like him. There’s absolutely no need to beat the parents in the audience over the head with your shillelagh of anti-Dubya propaganda. It’s funny the first time, but it’s incredibly annoying every other time and a waste of one of the better voice actors in the film in the person of Donald Sutherland. It’s a one-note joke that the movie keeps trying to wring more screen time out of, and it never quite works. Freddie Highmore’s take on Astro Boy isn’t bad, and Kristen Bell is another one of the movie’s high points in the character of Cora. Even Nathan Lane’s Ham Egg isn’t quite as obvious and forced a villain, and he operates the future version of Battlebots! If not for those issues, Astro Boy would be just a fun romp for the kids. If you could cut way back on General Stone’s Bushiness and maybe work a little harder to hide your weaker voice actors, you’ve got a pretty entertaining movie on your hands. But you watch the movie they make, not the movie you want them to make. After the oppressive sadness of Where The Wild Things Are, it’s nice to have a legitimately energetic kids movie again. US correspondent Ron Hogan can’t wait for Nicolas Cage to fulfill his destiny and star in a Uwe Boll movie. Find more by Ron at his blog, Subtle Bluntness and daily at Shaktronics and PopFi.
Astro Boy Review
<span title='2025-07-30 00:00:00 +0000 UTC'>July 30, 2025</span> · 3 min · 544 words · Sharon Zucker