Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
We are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our servers. We hope to have this resolved soon. This issue doesn't affect premium users.
Get Premium
Watch on MixDrop/MyStream
Oops...
Something went wrong
Try again later.
Something went wrong
Try again later.
Here You can choose a playback server.
Bicentennial Man
Description
The life of a family of Martin, an ordinary family that buy a robot, in order to help them in making many tasks at the same time, has been changed completely when they find out that Andrew, the robot, is able to acquire human feelings, as he has used them, in order to stop whose creators to make them stop destroying it.
The life of a family of Martin, an ordinary family that buy a robot, in order to help them in making many tasks at the same time, has been changed completely when they find out that Andrew, the robot, is able to acquire human feelings, as he has used them, in order to stop whose creators to make them stop destroying it.
Actors:
Mike Elizalde,
Bradley Whitford,
Christian Ristow,
Kristy Connelly,
Embeth Davidtz,
Lynne Thigpen,
Scott Waugh,
Richard Cross,
Alexander Kanellakos,
Brett Wagner,
George Wallace,
...»
Mike Elizalde
1960, Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico
Bradley Whitford
10 October 1959, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Christian Ristow
Kristy Connelly
25 September 1965, Pontiac, Michigan, USA
Embeth Davidtz
11 August 1965, Lafayette, Indiana, USA
Lynne Thigpen
22 December 1948, Joliet, Illinois, USA
Scott Waugh
Richard Cross
Alexander Kanellakos
Brett Wagner
George Wallace
8 June 1917, New York City, New York, USA
Director:
Chris Columbus
Chris Columbus
10 September 1958, Spangler, Pennsylvania, USA
Country:
Germany, United States
COMMENTS (0)
Sort by
Newest
Newest
Oldest
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
October 15, 2002
Virtually every emotion, motivation, idea, character and plot point in the movie is flat and perfunctory -- except for those that carry the invisible subtitle, 'Cry, dammit!'
Globe and Mail
March 19, 2002
It's one thing to ask an audience to love a mechanical man, but quite another to love a mechanical performance.
June 05, 2002
You long for [Williams] to break the metal mold, if only for a minute, to remind you that you are watching the best improvisational comedian of this millennium.
Boston Globe
January 01, 2000
A male fantasy with artificial intelligence.
December 02, 2002
The film swiftly settles into an unevenly paced, episodic structure, unsure whether it's a family saga, a sci-fi drama or a children's comedy.
Common Sense Media
December 22, 2010
Film about robot who wants to be human is so-so.
November 06, 2002
Columbus lays on the sentimentality thickly, sometimes letting it get in the way of the storytelling. The longer the movie continues, the more overt he becomes in his emotional pandering.
January 01, 2000
It's a bit strange, and strained.
October 23, 2003
Bicentennial Man is sometimes sweet, but it's also a phenomenal waste of talent, and a continuation of a Williams' trip down the wrong road.
Mr. Showbiz
January 01, 2000
So coldly calculated it could give you frostbite.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
January 02, 2005
...aspires to an almost adult level of seriousness.
January 01, 2000
You wish that the film unfolded on a more modest scale and in the real world.

