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Walt Disney Pictures Presents Meet The RobinsonsWalt Disney Pictures Presents Meet The RobinsonsThe first 20 minutes feel slow as it sets up Lewis’s orphanage life. Once he meets Wilbur and travels to the future, the film goes into hyperdrive—sometimes too fast. The middle section is chaotic (in a fun way), but some jokes land awkwardly. His life changes when he meets Wilbur Robinson, a mysterious boy from the year 2037 who whisks him away to the future. In this vibrant future world—filled with singing frogs, family-serving robots, and eccentric relatives—Lewis discovers that his own actions in the past directly shape the world he sees. Meet The Robinsons - by Gina Wurtz Meet The Robinsons was more than just a sci-fi comedy; it was a deeply personal project for director Stephen Anderson, who identified with Lewis’s experience of being adopted. A. The Importance of Family Walt Disney Pictures Presents Meet The Robinsons At the school science fair, Lewis's invention is sabotaged by a dastardly villain in a bowler hat and his sentient robotic hat, Doris. Just when all seems lost, he is approached by a confident, fast-talking boy from the future named Wilbur Robinson (Wesley Singerman), who claims to be a time cop. Wilbur whisks Lewis away to the year 2037 to fix his damaged time machine and stop the Bowler Hat Guy from altering the past and destroying the future. The film was directed by Steven Anderson and Nathan Greno, who brought their unique vision and style to the project. The animation team at Disney spent months developing the film's distinctive look, which blended traditional and computer-generated imagery. The voice cast, which included Jordan Fry as Lewis and Wesley Singerman as Wilbur, brought the characters to life with their energetic and heartfelt performances. The first 20 minutes feel slow as it : This central motto, famously borrowed from Walt Disney himself, serves as the film's philosophical backbone. Unlike many children's films that celebrate effortless success, Meet the Robinsons openly embraces failure. In one of the movie's most memorable scenes, the Robinson family throws a celebratory dinner to cheer on Lewis after an invention fails, teaching him that mistakes are vital stepping stones to progress. Meet the Robinsons is a flawed, messy, but deeply sincere film that gets better with age. It deserved better in 2007, and its message has only grown more relevant. Keep moving forward — and give this one a chance. His life changes when he meets Wilbur Robinson, Doris’s red eye flickers… and goes warm. She shuts down, not destroyed, but at peace. “Thank you,” she whispers. “For not giving up on me.” The film premiered at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles on March 25, 2007, and was widely released on March 30. On its opening weekend, it earned a solid $25.1 million from 3,413 theaters, finishing in second place. The movie ended its theatrical run with in worldwide ticket sales. While this seems like a healthy sum, it was considered a box office disappointment against its massive $150 million production budget . However, the film was a critical success, receiving generally positive reviews from critics who praised its story and visual style. Rather than scrapping the project, director Stephen Anderson embraced the feedback. The crew spent an intense ten months reworking roughly 60% of the movie. They added the sinister robotic hat Doris, deepened Goob's backstory, and overhauled the climax. This high-stakes overhaul paid off beautifully, resulting in a tightly paced, emotionally satisfying narrative that helped set a new creative standard for Disney's modern revival. Music and Cultural Legacy Lewis’s journey isn't just about becoming a great inventor; it's about finding a place to belong and learning to accept love. Reception and Legacy |
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