This family-friendly, inspirational action drama is set in 2020, when high-tech entertainment consists of 8-foot-tall, 2,000-pound robots brutally boxing via their owners' remote controls. Scheming Charlie Kenton (Hugh Jackman) is a former boxer-turned-promoter who pieces together low-end bots from scrap metal for underground fights, working out of a gym owned by former girlfriend Bailey (Evangeline Lilly). Suddenly saddled with an 11-year-old son, Max (Dakota Goyo)—whose mother recently died—Charlie just wants to get rid of him. But then one night, Max discovers Atom, a battered, sparring bot discarded in a junkyard. Ferociously adept at bot-boxing electronics, smart-mouthed Max befriends Atom, who has a special shadow-mode adjustment that allows it to pantomime human movement. Predictably, Charlie eventually bonds with both, joining Max to train Atom for awesome contests with competitors like Ambush, Midas, Noisy Boy, two-headed Twin Cities, and constantly evolving Zeus (Sugar Ray Leonard served as fight consultant). Shawn Levy's film wears its influences on its sleeve—from Rocky to Transformers—but Jackman and Goyo shine in this crowd-pleaser. Recommended. [Note: DVD/Blu-ray extras include audio commentary by director Shawn Levy, a “Making of Metal Valley” scene segment (15 min.), a “Building the Bots” production featurette (6 min.), bloopers (3 min.), and trailers. Exclusive to the Blu-ray release is the “Second Screen” feature with interactive content, deleted and extended scenes (18 min.), “Countdown to the Fight: The Charlie Kenton Story” in-character featurette with star Hugh Jackman (14 min.), a “Sugar Ray Leonard: Cornerman's Champ” segment featuring the boxing consultant (6 min.), and a bonus DVD copy of the film. Bottom line: a fine extras package for a fun action film.] (S. Granger)
Real Steel
DreamWorks, 127 min., PG-13, DVD: $29.99, Blu-ray: $39.99, Jan. 24 Volume 27, Issue 1
Real Steel
Star Ratings
As of March 2022, Video Librarian has changed from a four-star rating system to a five-star one. This change allows our reviewers to have a wider range of critical viewpoints, as well as to synchronize with Google’s rating structure. This change affects all reviews from March 2022 onwards. All reviews from before this period will still retain their original rating. Future film submissions will be considered our new 1-5 star criteria.
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