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L'épopée extraordinaire du robot qui voulait être humain.
En ce début de XXIème siècle, la robotique a fait d'importants progrès. La famille Martin peut ainsi faire l'acquisition d'un robot domestique, le NDR-114, conçu pour effectuer toutes les tâches ménagères. Les enfants réagissent chacun différemment à la présence d'un nouveau venu, surnommé Andrew. Grace, l’aînée, le considère comme une boîte de conserve et lui ordonne de sauter du premier étage. Après cet incident, Andrew fait preuve de créativité et développe des sentiments. M. Martin décide de le traiter désormais comme un être humain à part entière.
Avis de la communauté (10)
I’ve loved **Bicentennial Man** and **A.I. Artificial Intelligence** ever since they came out. I was a computer science undergrad at the time, and both films completely reshaped how I saw the future of tech. They were not just about smarter machines, but about how computing could transform human life itself. Rewatching them in 2026 hits differently. Back then, sentient androids and emotionally aware AI felt like distant poetry. Now, with conversational AI, generative systems, and advanced robotics all around us, the foundations of those worlds are already here. Bicentennial Man still stands out for me. Beneath the retro sci-fi aesthetic, it is really about personhood, dignity, and what it means to be recognised as human. It asks questions we are only now starting to face for real. These films remind me why I fell in love with computer science in the first place. Not just to build smarter tools, but to explore what it truly means to be human.
Great movie ... One of Robin Williams' best movies.
This one’s a classic, no doubt about it. I watched Bicentennial Man when I was really young, and back then it honestly blew my mind, felt deep, emotional, even philosophical. Rewatching it now, I know there are far more complex and layered films out there, but this still hits. It’s nostalgic, it’s heartfelt, and it’s got that cozy, futuristic vibe that only late '90s sci-fi dramas really capture. Robin Williams absolutely carries it, you can feel the warmth, the humor, the humanity trying to break through the circuits. The film spans 200 years, and even though it can be slow or sentimental at times, the journey it takes you on is worth it. It asks big questions: what does it mean to be human? To love? To die? And even if it doesn’t explore those ideas as deeply as it could, the intent is there, and it’s powerful in its own soft-spoken way. It’s not a masterpiece, and it’s not trying to be. But it is a classic, one of those films that sticks with you more for how it made you feel than what it actually said. Nostalgic, soulful, and quietly moving.
8.5/10 What a really great movie this actually is. So well thought out, Heartfelt and charming. Just a beautiful tale told with meaning and purpose and it certainly gets me in the feels that's for sure. If this movie doesn't move you then you need to check your Pulse.
Nostálgico, me lembra as sessões da tarde