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Do people not like I, Robot? It's a fun movie that doesn't feel like cheesy sci-fi to me. The ridiculous spinning camera toward the end was over the top, but the rest of the movie was decent.
It was seen as a new low when it came to product placement, which was much talked about at the time. There's a scene where someone compliments Will Smith's character's shoes and the camera zooms in on them while he says "vintage 200X" that was incredibly reviled.
Ah yeah, the Chuck Taylor reference, it was brief, but considering how it had been criticized it must've stuck out in how obvious it sounded. It's at least a far cry from being Hawaii 5-0 tier, thankfully.
I've seen that link before without realizing it was from a movie, not an actual commercial. I can't believe they put that in a movie.
I haven't heard anyone personally that outwardly disliked it, I picked it based on the RT/metacritic score and me enjoying it despite that. I was way too young to remember fresh reactions to the movie when it came out.
I didn't, it had some of the worst, most blatant product placement of any movie I've seen.
People don't like it because it has nothing to do with the source material beyond some character names. It's literally a random action script that had Asimov slapped on top of it just so the studio could legally claim to be using their movie rights. No relation to the book. Nothing at all like anything the original author himself would have ever written, to the point of being disrespectful to one of the greatest of the genre.
I don't think it's an insult to Asimov's work.
Asimov didn't write action movies or stories that could become action movies at all. But the elements in the movie I Robot are all solidly woven into Asimov's work.
But I agree it's a tradgedy that it's a lot closer to Minority report than to Bicentennial Man, Total Recall, or Blade Runner, as far as adaptations go.
I'm not mad at what we got, but we could have had a lot more Asimov and a lot less action movie tropes.
All that said, Will Smith's deliver of "11% is more than enough. A human being would have known that." is an incredibly worthy condensation of Asimov's core tension across the books.