The Wild Robot


The Wild Robot is a 2024 American animated science fiction film based on the 2016 novel by Peter Brown and produced by DreamWorks Animation. It was written and directed by Chris Sanders and features the voices of Lupita Nyong'o, Pedro Pascal, Kit Connor, Bill Nighy, Stephanie Hsu, Matt Berry, Ving Rhames, Mark Hamill, and Catherine O'Hara. The film follows a service robot shipwrecked on an island who must adapt to her surroundings, build relationships with the local wildlife, and become the adoptive mother of an orphaned goose.
DreamWorks Animation bought the screenplay before the first novel's release in 2016. Sanders first encountered the original book through his daughter and was offered an opportunity to direct a film adaptation at DreamWorks. The film's visuals use a watercolor aesthetic, inspired by classic Disney animated films and the works of Hayao Miyazaki. Kris Bowers composed the score, marking his first score for a fully animated film. Development took four years on a budget of $78million.
The Wild Robot premiered at the 49th Toronto International Film Festival on September 8, 2024, and was released in the United States on September 27, by Universal Pictures. The film received critical acclaim from critics who praised it for its writing, animation, score, emotional depth, and voice acting. The film was a commercial success, grossing $334.5million worldwide. Among its accolades, it received nine Annie Awards, won Best Animated Feature at the Critics' Choice Awards and Producers Guild of America Awards, and was nominated for four Golden Globe Awards and three Academy Awards, becoming DreamWorks' most-nominated film at the latter ceremony. A sequel is in development.

Plot

A storm causes a Universal Dynamics cargo ship to lose six ROZZUM robots, which wash up on an uninhabited island. Only Unit 7134 survives and is accidentally activated by wildlife. "Roz" is called a monster by the frightened wildlife and injures herself trying to help them, even after learning how to communicate with all animals. Unable to find anyone needing her services and signaling for retrieval, she gets struck by lightning and is attacked by animals. While fleeing from the aggressive grizzly bear Thorn, Roz accidentally crushes a goose nest, resulting in the destruction of all but one egg.
Roz protects the egg from the hungry red fox Fink. A gosling hatches, imprints on Roz, and accidentally breaks her long-range transmitter. The mother opossum Pinktail "provides" Roz with the task of caring for the gosling to ensure he can fly, swim, and eat by himself before the winter migration. Fink discovers he can benefit from Roz who builds a shelter. Roz names the gosling Brightbill, and the three cohabit. As Brightbill grows up, he is rejected by other geese. Upon discovering that Roz accidentally killed his family, Brightbill feels betrayed.
Roz reconstructs ROZZUM unit 6262, nicknames her "Rummage", and asks for advice. Rummage gives her transmitter to Roz, advising her to return to the Universal Dynamics factory. Roz enlists the help of the peregrine falcon Thunderbolt to help Brightbill learn to fly and receives advice from Longneck, a leader for the geese's migration, allowing Brightbill to master flying just in time to join the migration. Missing Brightbill and unsure of her continued purpose, Roz reactivates her transmitter but shuts it off immediately after Universal Dynamics detects her signal.
During the migration, a thunderstorm forces the geese to shelter inside a Universal Dynamics greenhouse, triggering a contamination alert that sets reconnaissance robots after them. Longneck sacrifices himself so Brightbill can lead the flock to safety. Meanwhile, Roz and Fink save the island's animals during a severe snowstorm, urging them to a truce supported by Thorn before Roz powers down.
Spring arrives and Roz reawakens to find the animals still following the truce and Brightbill returning, hailed now as a hero. Shortly after, a Universal Dynamics dropship captained by a Virtual Observational Neutralizing Troublesome Retrieval Authority robot arrives to recover Roz. Roz flees with Fink, pursued by RECO robots dispatched by Vontra. The animals band together to fight off the RECOs, but Vontra detonates the damaged RECOs to incapacitate and capture Roz, starting a forest fire in the process. The geese and Thunderbolt attack the dropship so Brightbill can save Roz as Fink and the others extinguish the fire. Despite Roz appearing to have been shut down by Vontra, her love for Brightbill restores her systems. Roz eventually destroys Vontra and evacuates Brightbill as the dropship explodes.
Roz decides to return to Universal Dynamics to protect the island from future attacks, but she promises to return. The animals continue to live together on the island while Roz works at another Universal Dynamics greenhouse, maintaining her memories. Brightbill visits her, and the two embrace.

Voice cast

  • Lupita Nyong'o as:
  • * ROZZUM unit 7134, an abandoned robot from the tech company Universal Dynamics that was washed onto an island and learns to adapt to the new environment. The name of her product line, ROZZUM, and her manufacturer are references to Rossum's Universal Robots, the play that created the term "robot".
  • * ROZZUM unit 6262, a broken robot that was washed onto the same island as Roz who gives Roz her transmitter to return home
  • Pedro Pascal as Fink, a sly but well-meaning red fox who is the first animal that Roz befriends
  • * Finnegan and other foxes from the SaveAFox Rescue provide Fink's vocal effects.
  • Kit Connor as Brightbill, an orphaned runt Barnacle goose who is raised by Roz as her own son after losing his biological family
  • * Boone Storme as Baby Brightbill
  • Catherine O'Hara as Pinktail, a maternal Virginia opossum who gives Roz advice on raising Brightbill.
  • Bill Nighy as Longneck, a wise, elderly barnacle goose who helps Roz understand teaching Brightbill how to fly
  • Stephanie Hsu as Vontra, a callous, tentacled robot sent by Universal Dynamics to retrieve Roz
  • Mark Hamill as Thorn, an aggressive grizzly bear and the island's apex predator who later befriends Roz and the other animals during the winter truce
  • Matt Berry as Paddler, a neurotic beaver who spends his days trying to gnaw down a giant tree
  • Ving Rhames as Thunderbolt, a peregrine falcon who helps Brightbill learn to fly
  • Randy Thom as the RECOs, reconnaissance robots designed by Universal Dynamics to serve Vontra

    Production

Development

Before the release of The Wild Robot—a novel created by Peter Brown—in 2016, DreamWorks Animation bought the screenplay, setting the budget at $78million. Chris Sanders first encountered Brown's book through his daughter, though he never read it himself. Years later, while looking for his next project at DreamWorks, Sanders was offered an opportunity to write and direct an adaptation of the book for the studio. Upon reading it, Sanders immediately fell in love with the story and felt he was the right person to adapt it to film. He described the book as "deceptively simple" and "emotionally complex". Sanders had previously considered the idea of a creature bonding with animals in a forest for his directorial debut Lilo & Stitch. Sanders contacted Brown and would later describe the phone call as critical to the film's development. Brown told the production team that his intended theme for the book was that kindness could be a survival skill. Sanders sought to weave that theme through the film and felt he achieved that goal. Another theme in the story that Sanders was drawn to was that of motherhood. He felt he had never done a story of this nature before. Development took four years.
Changes were made to the book's story for the film. In the book, Roz is in constant search of a task but also in the wrong place and with no one to give her tasks. Sanders felt that she risked becoming monotonous at points in the story, so he strived to make Roz constantly interesting and compelling throughout. Some character roles from the book were reduced in order to give others more substantial screen time and impact. The changes to the characters and their roles were also made to prevent the film from overcrowding.

Casting

Cast members Lupita Nyong'o, Pedro Pascal, Catherine O'Hara, Bill Nighy, Kit Connor, Mark Hamill, Matt Berry and Ving Rhames were revealed on March 5, 2024, with the release of the film's first trailer.
Sanders wanted Roz to be a compelling character and felt an extraordinary voice performance was necessary to achieve this. He wanted to avoid a two-dimensional fictional take on a robot, where they go straight from being emotionless to emotional. Nyong'o was tasked with finding a voice for the character and evolving it as the story progressed. The actress's role was particularly important as Roz did not possess facial articulation. This meant Nyong'o's voice was the main way of signifying Roz's emotions.
According to Hamill, who voiced Thorn, he learned about the film after reading the book The Wild Robot. Hamill says that The Wild Robot reminded him of his first feelings about Star Wars, in which he originated the role of Luke Skywalker.

Animation and design

The Wild Robot would be the final film to be animated entirely in-house at DreamWorks, as Cartoon Brew reported on October 6, 2023, that the studio would be shifting away from producing films in-house in their Glendale campus to relying more heavily on outside studios after 2024. Additional character rigging was done by French studio Stim Studio.
After reading the book, Sanders felt the story's innocent tone and natural setting required a look that strayed away from the standard CGI photorealism in many modern animated films. He and production designer Raymond Zibach wanted the film in its finished state to still resemble the concept paintings. To achieve this, the production team built upon the technologies used in two of DreamWorks' earlier films, Puss in Boots: The Last Wish and The Bad Guys. While the characters were made up of CGI geometrical shapes, their surfaces possess a hand-painted look. This painterly style philosophy was carried onto every visual element in the film, including the sky and environments.
Sanders took inspiration from classic Disney animated movies and the works of Hayao Miyazaki, resulting in a stylized CG visual style that he described as "a Monet painting in a Miyazaki forest". He considered Bambi and My Neighbour Totoro as the biggest influences on the visuals. The works of Syd Mead served as inspiration for the futuristic parts of the film.
Sanders wanted Roz's design to be memorable, and one that would take its place among fiction's most famous robots. Taking inspiration from C-3PO and R2-D2 from Star Wars and Robby the Robot from Forbidden Planet, he wanted Roz to have little facial articulation. Sanders and the rest of the design team made several prototype designs during production. One of the designers, Hyun Huh presented his Roz design to the crew, which became the basis for the one seen in the film. The crew immediately fell in love with Huh's design, with Sanders describing it as simple and appealing. Brown's original book described Roz with great detail, so Sanders and the team knew they had to leave some design elements out. Although on behalf of Brown's description of what a ROZZUM unit's purpose was to humans, they aimed for Roz's design to be humanoid.