Wendy Ide 

The Wild Robot review – lost-in-the-jungle Roz joins animation’s robot greats

Superbly voiced by Lupita Nyong’o, the star of DreamWorks’ classy adaptation of Peter Brown’s bestseller learns to survive on a harsh, uninhabited island
  
  

Fink (voiced by Pedro Pascal) and Roz (Lupita Nyong’o) in The Wild Robot.
Hostile territory… Roz the robot (voiced by Lupita Nyong’o), with Fink the fox (Pedro Pascal), in The Wild Robot. Photograph: Universal Pictures/DreamWorks Animation

It’s a recurring theme in animation: the robot lost in hostile territory who finds that its best tool for survival is a soul. DreamWorks’ latest, a handsome adaptation of Peter Brown’s children’s book, directed by The Croods film-maker Chris Sanders, follows in the metal footsteps of pictures such as WALL-E and The Iron Giant – by any measure two all-time animation greats. It’s a testament to the quality of this sharply written and richly detailed movie that it holds its own in such illustrious company.

The Wild Robot is a quality production throughout, but one of its key assets is Lupita Nyong’o’s superb voice work. As the robot Roz, who is stranded on a jungle island populated by wild animals, Nyong’o fully inhabits her character’s arc, from synthetic, Siri-style AI perkiness to the world-weary wounded quality that bleeds from every word at the end. It’s sentimental stuff, certainly, but the picture’s unexpectedly dark humour outweighs any maudlin tendencies.

  • In UK and Irish cinemas

Watch a trailer for The Wild Robot.
 

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