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As it happens, “Real Steel’s” most endearing character isn’t human at all, but an obsolete second-generation robot named Atom. With neon-blue eyes glowing behind what looks like a mesh ...
Max and Atom become a fan favorite, dancing into the ring, and, of course, performing the robot dance. Real Steel is a movie about the very opposite of real. A movie with no heart, with the humans ...
In the role of 11-year-old, newly motherless Max, he is the saving grace of “Real Steel,” helping not only to bring out the humanity in Atom — Max just knows the bot has the circuitry of a ...
Real Steel”’s most laughable component is a pseudo-philosophical suggestion that Atom may, possibly, be sentient. A long, still shot holds on Atom as his unblinking blue eyes stare and stare ...
But when the robot is destroyed, they go to a scrap yard to get parts. Max finds an old generation robot named Atom and restores him. Max wants Atom to fight but Charlie tells him he won't last a ...
“In the role of 11-year-old, newly motherless Max, he is the saving grace of Real Steel, helping not only to bring out the humanity in Atom — Max just knows the bot has the circuitry of a ...
Real Steel director Shawn Levy knew he succeeded ... they partner to train a boxing robot–when that robot, named Atom, tested as well with movie audiences as Jackman and Goyo.
first with a bot that gets destroyed then with a makeshift old sparring robot named Atom that looks like it belongs on Tatooine. After a couple of amazing victories, the relatively slight machine ...
It’s not an easy task, but Real Steel, Hugh Jackman’s robot-boxing movie that opens in theaters Oct. 7, aims to connect on both accounts. Atom, the underdog robot Jackson’s over-the-hill pug ...
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