Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Ron's Gone Wrong

Last night I finally had the chance to see Ron's Gone Wrong and it is both a touching story of friendship and a cautionary tale about the dangers of social media.  Barney (Jack Dylan Grazer) is a socially awkward teen who feels even more left out because he is the only student at Nonsuch Middle School who doesn't have a B-Bot.  Mark Weidell (Justice Smith), the CEO of the Bubble corporation (a tech giant obviously modeled on Apple), has created a robot that uses information from an owner's online profile to become his or her best friend and to find other online friends but Andrew Morris, the COO of Bubble, has more sinister plans for the B-Bot.  When Barney's dad (Ed Helms) and his Bulgarian grandmother (Olivia Colman) realize how much he wants a B-Bot, they go to the Bubble store but are told that there is a three month wait-list to get one.  Not wanting to disappoint him, they pay a delivery man under the table for one that fell off the truck.  Barney's B-Bot, named Ron (Jack Galifianakis), is defective and cannot download any of the software or connect to the Bubble network.  Barney tries to take Ron back but ends up bonding with him and decides to teach him manually how to be his friend.  Ron ends up teaching Barney how to be a friend and helps him to reconnect with the friends he had in elementary school.  What I loved most about this movie is that Ron serves as real friend to Barney rather than an online one and I loved the scenes where they are laughing and having fun playing together.  I also think it is interesting that all of Ron's former friends, Savannah (Kylie Cantrall), Rich (Ricardo Hurtado), Noah (Cullen McCarthy) and Ava (Ava Morse), ultimately become disillusioned with their B-Bots and find a more meaningful connection with Barney.  This is a theme that I particularly enjoy (go here and here).  The character design of Ron is really cute and Galifianakis's portrayal of him is incredibly endearing.  I also enjoyed all of the subtle humor, especially the digs at Apple (as someone who dislikes the Apple store intensely, I absolutely loved that the Bubble store employees, with their tablets in hand, could do nothing to fix Ron because it mirrors my own experience exactly).  As a former teacher, the docking station for the B-Bots at the school made me laugh out loud.  This is a really fun movie with a lot of heart and I highly recommend it.

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