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Real Steel
Real Steel
Charlie Kenton is a washed-up fighter who retired from the ring when robots took over the sport. After his robot is trashed, he reluctantly teams up with his estranged son to rebuild and train an unlikely contender.
rating
7.066
runtime
127 min

Release

2011-09-28

Cast

Hugh Jackman
Hugh Jackman
as Charlie Kenton
Dakota Goyo
Dakota Goyo
as Max Kenton
Evangeline Lilly
Evangeline Lilly
as Bailey Tallet
Kevin Durand
Kevin Durand
as Ricky
Anthony Mackie
Anthony Mackie
as Finn
Hope Davis
Hope Davis
as Aunt Debra
James Rebhorn
James Rebhorn
as Marvin
Karl Yune
Karl Yune
as Tak Mashido
Sophie Levy
Sophie Levy
as Big Sister
Tess Levy
Tess Levy
as Little Sister
Olga Fonda
Olga Fonda
as Farra Lemkova
John Gatins
John Gatins
as Kingpin
Gregory Sims
Gregory Sims
as Bill Panner
Torey Adkins
Torey Adkins
as Large Texan Man
Phil LaMarr
Phil LaMarr
as ESPN Boxing Commentator
John Hawkinson
John Hawkinson
as San Leandro Gentleman #2
David Alan Basche
David Alan Basche
as ESPN Boxing Commentator
Julian Gant
Julian Gant
as Starblaze Arena Reporter
Ken Alter
Ken Alter
as Virgin America Spectrum Ring Announcer
Leilani Barrett
Leilani Barrett
as Virgin America Spectrum Ref
D.B. Dickerson
D.B. Dickerson
as Twin Cities Controller
Peter Carey
Peter Carey
as Bing Arena Announcer
Dan Lemieux
Dan Lemieux
as Bing Arena Ref
Richard Goteri
Richard Goteri
as Older Gentleman
Tim Holmes
Tim Holmes
as Blacktop Controller
Ricky Wayne
Ricky Wayne
as Underground Promoter
Taris Tyler
Taris Tyler
as Robot Promoter
Kevin Dorman
Kevin Dorman
as Atom Performance Capture
John Manfredi
John Manfredi
as Sergei Lemkova
Mike Ancrile
Mike Ancrile
as Fight Fan (uncredited)
Leah Barkoff
Leah Barkoff
as Upscale Fight Fan (uncredited)
Joshua Ray Bell
Joshua Ray Bell
as Rodeo Cowboy (uncredited)
Clark Birchmeier
Clark Birchmeier
as Bar Patron (uncredited)
Ben Hernandez Bray
Ben Hernandez Bray
as Ricky's Henchman (uncredited)
Wayne E. Brown
Wayne E. Brown
as Upscale Boxing Fan (uncredited)
Justin Calkins
Justin Calkins
as Rodeo Cowboy (uncredited)
Ron Causey
Ron Causey
as Kingpin's Henchman (uncredited)
Jahnel Curfman
Jahnel Curfman
as Panoramic Fight Fan (uncredited)
Johnny Flynn
Johnny Flynn
as ESPN Commentator (uncredited)
Logan Fry
Logan Fry
as Rabid Fight Fan (uncredited)
Megan Grant
Megan Grant
as Vendor (uncredited)
J.J. Green
J.J. Green
as Crash Palace Fan (uncredited)
Shane Hagedorn
Shane Hagedorn
as Photographer (uncredited)
Kef Lee
Kef Lee
as Zeus Robot Handler #1 (uncredited)
Brad Leo Lyon
Brad Leo Lyon
as Fight Fan (uncredited)
Mary Magyari
Mary Magyari
as Usher (uncredited)
Megan Mockensturm
Megan Mockensturm
as Fight Fan (uncredited)
Kirstie Munoz
Kirstie Munoz
as Vendor (uncredited)
Anton Narinskiy
Anton Narinskiy
as Farra's Body Guard (uncredited)
Chris Newman
Chris Newman
as Starblaze Security Guard (uncredited)
Wendy Paquette
Wendy Paquette
as Fight Fan (uncredited)
Alan D. Purwin
Alan D. Purwin
as Helicopter Pilot (uncredited)
Miguel Sandoval
Miguel Sandoval
as Judge (uncredited)
Dwight Sora
Dwight Sora
as Japanese Reporter #2 (uncredited)
Jojuan Westmoreland
Jojuan Westmoreland
as Zoo Fight Fan (uncredited)
Amanda Bright
Amanda Bright
as Ricky's Girl (uncredited)
Gary T. Jones
Gary T. Jones
as Rich Man (uncredited)
Rima Fakih
Rima Fakih
as Self (uncredited)

Director

REVIEWS
NA

John Chard

No splitting this Atom, it has got a rock solid heart. Real Steel is directed by Shawn Levy and collectively adapted to the screen by John Gatins, Dan Gilroy and Jeremy Leven from a Richard Matheson short story called Steel. It stars Hugh Jackman, Dakota Goyo, Evangeline Lilly, Anthony Mackie, Kevin Durand, Hope Davis and James Rebhorn. Music is scored by Danny Elfman and cinematography by Mauro Fiore. Set in the near future, robot boxing is a big crowd pulling sport. After a struggling robot operator is introduced to an 11-year-old son he has never known, they stumble upon a discarded robot at a junk yard.... We can all moan about the mimicry of an idea and the clichés that dominate Real Steel, but you really got to hand it to the makers for what they have achieved. They have crafted a family film that's very much perfect in this day and age. The story is one that any adult Sylvester Stallone fan can acknowledge and appreciate, the human heartbeat pleasingly steady, while the premise of big colourful robots beating the crap out of each other delights youngsters and us adults who are still young at heart. Film pretty much does what any other film of this type does, lays on the syrup in the last quarter where second chances and family strife come thundering through the plotting. Undeniably it's hugely derivative, events are joystick operated to get an emotional response from a family audience, while product placement reins and the script often sags under the weight of unoriginality. But it does uplift the spirit and getting to the end is easy since it's so much berserker fun. Yes it's the robot Atom, the people's champion, yes it's David vS Goliath and yes! It's Balboa vS Creed. Nothing wrong with that really. The cast don't really have to offer up much beyond being adequate within the context of the material, though a muscular Jackman finds good paternal chemistry with young Goyo. In fact Goyo is pleasingly not annoying, always a bonus is that. Inevitably the robots are the stars, they're a triumph of design and visual effects and a sight for sore eyes, while Levy has a good handle on staging the fight sequences - even when cribbing from Balboa. The near future look is terrific as well, with Fiore's colour photography very appealing. Coining in over $290 million at the worldwide box office (over £180 million in profit), Real Steel found the family audience it was looking for, proving once again that there is a market for simple and effective popcorn carnage. It's not high art or intelligently scripted, but was anyone seriously thinking that was going to be the case here? If you want brains with this premise then seek out Twilight Zone episode "Steel", starring the excellent Lee Marvin, otherwise just sit back and enjoy the ride and let the botty bots and human interest raise the pulse and gladden the heart respectively. 7/10 Home format release is a sparkling print, extras are annoyingly short but the blooper reel is fun, we get a stunt deconstruction, and we learn about the influence a certain Mr. Spielberg had on the production.

NA

Ruuz

I wonder if this was originally written to be a Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots movie, but when they couldn't get the rights they just decided to make it anyway. In either case, it's not very good. Amazing that you could take a movie about anthropomorphic **robots** and manage to still make it into a cliche sports film. _Final rating:★½: - Boring/disappointing. Avoid where possible._