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  1. Há 21 horas · The film stars Will Smith as Detective Del Spooner, a technophobic cop with a deep-seated distrust of robots. Spooner is called to investigate the suspicious death of Dr. Alfred Lanning, a brilliant scientist who worked at U.S. Robotics. Initially ruled a suicide, Spooner suspects foul play and believes a robot named Sonny, voiced by Alan Tudyk ...

  2. Há 21 horas · By the middle of the movie — as this duo is trying to figure out why one robot, Sonny (Alan Tudyk), is self-aware — you’re fully invested in the somewhat obvious homicide-mystery plot. I, Robot wasn’t originally going to be an Asimov adaptation but instead originated as a screenplay called Hardwired, written by Jeff

  3. Há 1 dia · In I, Robot, the summer blockbuster released 20 years ago this month, Smith plays Del Spooner, a homicide detective in the Chicago Police Department who’s called upon to solve a mysterious ...

  4. Há 21 horas · In 'I, Robot,' Will Smith ruined the works of Isaac Asimov. Or maybe he didn't? Here's why this movie is way better in 2024 than it was in 2004.

  5. Há 5 dias · The movie's robots are curiously uninvolving as individuals, and when seen by the hundreds or thousands look like shiny chromium ants. True, a robot need not have much of a personality, but there is one robot, named Sonny and voiced by Alan Tudyk, who is more advanced than the standard robot, more "human," and capable of questions ...

  6. Há 3 dias · I, Robot is a 2004 American science fiction action film directed by Alex Proyas, set in 2035 where robots operate under three laws to ensure human safety. The story follows Detective Del Spooner as he investigates a possible robot involvement in a death, raising concerns about the future of humanity.

  7. Há 21 horas · (I’m going to call Sunny “she,” because the robot reads as female — in Colin O’Sullivan’s original novel, “The Dark Manual,” since retitled to match the series, it’s called Sonny — and because all the other main characters, including the primary antagonist, are women. It’s their world we’re in, not accidental­ly.)