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Review | Robot Dreams movie review: story of a dog and a robot is one of the best animated features you’ll ever see

  • A lonely bachelor in New York, Dog buys a robot companion and his life is forever changed. They explore the city together, until they are forced apart
  • Beautiful and heartbreaking, Pablo Berger’s film uses this apparently simple tale as a means to explore the complexities of inter-human experience

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A still from Robot Dreams (category: I), directed by Pablo Berger.

5/5 stars

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By turns heartbreaking and life-affirming, and achingly beautiful, Pablo Berger’s Robot Dreams is an animated delight, proving once again that all the photo-real, computer-generated whizz-bangery in the world is no substitute for great storytelling.

Adapted from Sara Varon’s 2007 comic of the same name, it tells the deceptively simple story of a friendship between a dog and a robot and, without any spoken dialogue, examines the profundities of inter-human relationships with more nuance and insight than almost any other film in recent memory.

Robot Dreams premiered at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, ushering in an awards-laden festival run that culminated in an Academy Award nomination for best animated feature earlier this year.

ROBOT DREAMS - Official Trailer - In Theaters May 31

The title inevitably recalls Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, the 1968 novel that inspired Blade Runner, but Berger’s film could not be further removed from the bleak, dystopian world view of Ridley Scott’s movie.

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His reimagining of New York circa 1984 is fuelled by affectionate nostalgia. The Spanish filmmaker studied at New York University in the 1980s, and the experience clearly informs his vivid, warts-and-all depiction of a city in transition.

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