By Huw Fullerton

Published: Saturday, 09 October 2021 at 12:00 am


3.0 out of 5 star rating

New animation Ron’s Gone Wrong (from 20th Century Studios which these days, sort of means Disney) is a bit of a Trojan horse. While its setting and cast are resolutely American it’s actually the brainchild of British studio Locksmith Animation, and it’s not hard to see this film’s playful, wicked sense of humour as a reflection of that origin.

The story is familiar – a new craze is sweeping the schoolyard, and every kid in town seems to have their hands on the hot new toy. But this time it’s not Pokémon Cards, Tazzos or even iPhones distracting the students – instead they’re glued to slick, high-tech robots called B-Bots, which sort of function as a smartphone-meets-Furby “best friend” to their owners.

Created by a standard Apple/Google-alike company called Bubble (hence Bubble-bots), these creations can talk, play games, project images, sing, take photos, “dress” as different characters (including, handily, a few Marvel and Star Wars figures presumably borrowed from Disney) and even come with a basic kind of AI.

They’re perfect, in other words, marketed as “your best friend out of the box” ­ – and the only kid who doesn’t have one is our friendless hero Barney (Jack Dylan Glazer), who struggles with loneliness and his eccentric family (including Ed Helms as a hapless WFH dad and Olivia Colman as a wild Eastern European grandmother) and longs to be part of the crowd.

Soon, he gets his own B-Bot – but there’s a catch. This unit is damaged, unable to connect to the internet and missing key programming. Horrified, Barney has to watch as his longed-for gift shouts bizarre phrases, destroys his possessions and regularly fails to perform the most basic functions. Its one remaining imperative? To be Barney’s best friend, whether he likes it or not.

Soon nicknamed “Ron” thanks to its serial number, this broken bot (voiced with upbeat glee by The Hangover’s Zach Galifianakis) is entertainingly eccentric, retaining no information about the world except words beginning with A (due to its halted information download), creaking with the familiar internet dial-up tone when asked questions and regularly losing arms, legs and pixelated facial features as it whacks into its surroundings.