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Ron's Gone Wrong is a 2021 British-American computer-animated science fiction comedy film directed by Sarah Smith and Jean-Philippe Vine (in his feature directorial debut), co-directed by Octavio E. Rodriguez and written by Peter Baynham and Smith.[1] The film features the voice of Jack Dylan Grazer as Barney, a socially awkward middle-schooler who befriends a defective robot he names Ron, voiced by Zach Galifianakis. Barney must find a way to protect Ron, who comes under danger from corporate employees. Additional voices include Ed Helms, Justice Smith, Rob Delaney, Kylie Cantrall, Ricardo Hurtado, and Olivia Colman.

Ron's Gone Wrong is the first feature film from Locksmith Animation,[2] and was animated by DNEG Animation. Animation and voice acting for the film were all done remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Plot[]

Spoiler Warning: The following contains important plot details of the entire film.

Tech giant Bubble unveils their latest creation: the B-bot, created by Bubble's CEO Marc Wydell with the intent to make a robot buddy that is designed to help make friends via algorithm. In the city of Nonsuch, California, middle schooler Barney Pudowski is the only kid in his class who does not have a B-bot. His former childhood friends, Savannah Meades, Rich Belcher, Noah, and Ava have all become absorbed by their individual B-bots. On Barney's birthday, his father, Graham, and his grandmother, Donka, come to realize that he does not have any friends. They hastily go to a Bubble store, but it closes for the day, leading them to buy a slightly damaged one from the store's delivery driver.

Barney receives the B-bot as his late-birthday gift, but upon activating it, he quickly learns that it is defective and glitchy. Not wanting to upset his father, Barney decides to take it back to the Bubble store to get it fixed, but ends up running into Rich and his friends who taunt and try to humiliate Barney. The B-bot begins to fight back as his safety functions have been disabled, with him and Barney happily running off. However, Rich called the police and they along with Graham and Donka are taken to the Bubble store so that the B-bot can be crushed. Not wanting to see him go, Barney secretly rescues him and names him Ron, a shortened version of his model number.

When Barney and Ron's actions are reported, Marc is happy to see Ron go against his programming while his COO Andrew Morris views it as bad publicity, believing Ron must be destroyed for the issue to be resolved. Barney teaches Ron how to be a good friend and, while hanging out, runs into Savannah who tells Ron that he needs to help Barney get friends. Despite Barney telling Savannah not to, she posts Ron's actions online, alerting Bubble. The next day, Ron gets out of the house and tries to get "friends" for Barney, bringing a series of random people to school. As Barney gets in trouble, Rich discovers Ron's unlocked function and downloads it, causing all the other B-bots to have their safety features turned off. The B-bots run wild and, in the end, after the B-Bots have a patch update, Savannah is publicly humiliated.

Barney is kicked out from school and tells Ron off, but upon returning home, realizes that Ron was truly being a friend and decides to run away with him when Bubble employees come for him. They briefly run into Savannah, still upset over her incident, and tells her that he is hiding in the woods. Meanwhile, while Andrew warns Marc about the ramifications of the B-bot, Marc sneaks away so that he can meet Ron while Bubble uses their resources to take control of all the B-bots to go looking for Ron and Barney in the woods. Due to the cold weather and Barney's asthma, he becomes weak and Ron brings him back to civilization just outside the school where Savannah, Rich, Noah and Ava rush out to help him.

Barney is taken to the hospital and recuperates before meeting Marc who patched Ron, making him like every other B-Bot. Barney demands that Marc access the cloud to get Ron's original personality, but Andrew took over the Bubble company and locked Marc out. Through an elaborate plan for Barney, Graham, Donka and Marc breaking into Bubble HQ, Barney manages to make it to the Bubble database, finds Ron's original data by his light and uploads him back into his body, restoring him back to his original code. Seeing that Bubble has direct access to everyone's B-bot and realizing that everyone is just as lonely as he was, Barney suggests upgrading all the B-bots to have Ron's flaws. However, this means that Ron will be dispersed. Barney reluctantly says goodbye to Ron as his programming is spread to everyone, mixing Marc's friendship algorithm with Ron's code. Marc blackmails Andrew into giving his position of CEO back after secretly recording him admitting that the B-bots spy on their owners for profit.

Three months later, everyone has a faulty B-bot, but are happy with their weird and wild personalities. Barney (who is now allowed back in school) no longer has one, but has become much more sociable and has gotten close with his former friends. As they hang out at recess, a giant Bubble tower that overlooks Nonsuch produces Ron's face.

Voice cast[]

  • Jack Dylan Grazer as Barney Pudowski, a socially awkward and lonesome middle-schooler.
  • Zach Galifianakis as R0NB1NT5CAT5CO ("Ron"), Barney's malfunctioning B-bot.
  • Ed Helms as Graham Pudowski, Barney's father and Donka's son.
  • Olivia Colman as Donka Pudowski, Barney's grandmother and Graham's mother who was born in Bulgaria.
  • Rob Delaney as Andrew Morris, an executive of Bubble corporation.
  • Justice Smith as Marc Wydell, the creator of the B-bot and the CEO of Bubble.
  • Kylie Cantrall as Savannah Meades, Barney's popular classmate.
  • Ricardo Hurtado as Rich Belcher, Barney's prankster classmate who teases Barney.
  • Cullen James McCarthy as Noah, Barney's classmate who loves video games.
  • Ava Morse as Ava, Barney's classmate who loves science.
  • Marcus Scribner as Alex, one of Rich's cronies.
  • Thomas Barbusca as Jayden, one of Rich's cronies.
  • Ruby Wax as Ms. Hartley, Barney's middle school principal.
  • Sarah Miller as Bree, a Bubble store manager.
  • Krupa Pattani as Sita, a colleague of Andrew Morris.
  • Megan Maczko as Miss Thomas, Barney's middle school teacher.
  • Bentley Kalu as a cop.
  • John Macmillan as Shayne the Biker.
  • David Menkin as Mr. Cleaver.
  • Iara Nemirovsky as Ellie.
  • Liam Payne as a B-bot who gets kicked by Andrew in a cameo appearance.

Production[]

Development and production[]

After founding Locksmith Animation, Sarah Smith wanted to create a film that observed the impact of the internet on children's relationships and self-esteem, which she realised could be made into a film after watching Her (2013), commenting "we have to make that film for kids, to [help] them evaluate those experiences".[3] Smith approached Peter Baynham with one paragraph of story where a robot learns through imitation, Smith said that Baynham asked "what if it was an idiot and it was annoying?"[4] Despite creating a British animated film, a creative decision was made to set it in a United States suburb. Locksmith co-founder Julie Lockhart explained, "From a design perspective, the fact that all the big tech companies are in California made it feel that’s where it should be. We're also making films for a global audience that may not specifically be about British culture."[5]

Locksmith had a troubled history in securing a distributor for the project. In May 2016, the studio formed a production deal with Paramount Pictures in which they would distribute Locksmith's films under their Paramount Animation banner.[6] However, the following year Paramount abandoned the deal when Paramount chairman and CEO Brad Grey was replaced by Jim Gianopulos.[7] In September 2017, Locksmith formed a multi-year production deal with 20th Century Fox, which would distribute their films under the 20th Century Fox Animation label with Locksmith aiming to theatrically release a film every 12–18 months.[7][8] The acquisition of 20th Century Fox by Disney led to concern that the distribution deal would be lost again.[9] Smith said the resulting acquisition was "terrifying", and described the prospect of promoting the project to Disney executives as "carrying coals to Newcastle", but ultimately they were supportive of the project.[10] After production began on the film, Locksmith moved to Warner Bros. Pictures for its future projects.[11]

On October 12, 2017, it was announced that the project would be titled Ron's Gone Wrong, and will serve as the first animated feature film from Locksmith Animation. Alessandro Carloni and Jean-Phillipe Vine were announced to serve as the film's co-directors with Octavio E. Rodriguez. The visual effects company DNEG Animation was on board as a digital production partner to provide the film's computer animation (being credit under "Feature Animation by DNEG").[12] Also, Baynham, who previously worked with Smith on Arthur Christmas (2011), and Elisabeth Murdoch were announced to executive produce the film with Smith.[13]

In test screenings, Smith was surprised to find that Donka was a popular character with children. The scene where Donka dances on a table with Ron was a favorite scene for children, and Smith viewed this as "comedy there that they haven't seen before".[10]

Casting[]

Grazer first began recording lines for the role of Barney in 2017 when he was 13 and did not finalize his role until early 2021 by the time he was 18. Grazer said that it became difficult to maintain his 13-year-old prepubescent voice throughout the years of recording.[14] He was originally introduced as a test voice for early animatics, but Smith kept him on after being astounded by the emotional range of his performance.[15]

Galifianakis was instructed to perform much of his lines for the role of Ron in a deadpan voice, to convey that Ron is run by an algorithm and is not very emotional. He commented that this was challenging and unusual, because he had never had directors in the past ask for "less" emotion. Smith praised Helms' performance in the role of Graham for skillfully improvising lines and contributing additional "touches" to the film, saying "You give him the lines and he’ll do six versions of his own and he’s hilarious".[10]

Animation[]

The character of Ron was designed to be aesthetically reminiscent of "stripped-down" computer software, with the pixelated interfaces of the MS-DOS operating system being a source of inspiration. Emphasis was placed on allowing Ron's animated performance to be versatile within the constraints of his design, which demanded precise control over his motion graphics skin that deliver his facial expressions.[16] This included allowing his face slide all across his body, such as his eyeballs appearing between his legs when picked up.[17] Baynham explained "he doesn't have a face that you can do all the classic things with, but somehow he does... like the way his eye might slip a little bit... that speaks to his simple clownishness."[18] Vine referred to Ron's behaviour as being alike to the Clippy personal assistant, describing him "cheerfully and annoyingly helpful all the time".[19] Locksmith consulted with the toy designer Sphero to investigate what would be a realistic design for a social media robot.[20] Vine said, "we wanted the movie to feel like it’s set right around now so the bot needs to feel tangible".[4]

Animation director Eric Leighton explained that it was important to track the emotional state of Ron to determine his range of behaviour. The scene where Ron physically attacks children is where he is "the most broken that a robot could possibly be", and where he is reprogrammed is at his most benign. The whole movie was shot out of sequence in favor of doing scenes across his degrees of "brokeness".[16] The character design of Barney was distinguished through coordinated color palettes; Barney's clothes are patterned in "earth tones" to indicate his love of nature, and his home is vibrant in contrast to the muted colors of other homes in the town he lives in.[16] In the storyboards of the film, Barney was originally going to have an shaped keyhole on his shirt to represent Locksmith's logo.

DNEG had to develop a new "shot-based" animation process for creating the film, in changeover from previously specializing in visual effects for live-action cinema. The animation software Pixar RenderMan was used for the film, and the Universal Scene Description file format was adopted a third of the way during production.[21]

Production was impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Animation for the film was done remotely with crew members working from home, which included digital modelling, rigging, and lighting. Editors faced difficulty assembling footage with temporarily out-of-sync audio, which impaired judgement over the timing of edits. Voice acting was also done remotely, and involved makeshift home recording setups where blankets were used for soundproofing. A voice actor even had to ask family members sharing an internet connection to come offline, in order to free bandwidth for a recording session.[22][23][3]

A labor dispute arose over DNEG announcing 20%-25% pay cuts to employees earning more than £35,000 per year, which it said was due to business disruption caused by COVID-19. This led to 169 employees signing a collective grievance statement. The move was later partially reversed; DNEG was forced to reach deals with its business partners, this included Locksmith who agreed to offer a salary top-up and completion bonus to employees working on the film. The trade union BECTU condemned DNEG for its refusal to communicate with the union, and said its response to the collective grievance was deliberately indirect.[24][25] The film took approximately five years to complete.[16]

Musical score and soundtrack album[]

Henry Jackman composed the film score.[26] Speaking about the score, Jackman said that "it has its own identity, similar to Wreck-It Ralph or Big Hero 6" having the "same musical landscape and color in this film",[27] and also had enjoyed working in the film, calling the scoring sessions as "enormous fun".[28] Vine and Smith expressed gratitude to Jackman on how his score elevated the film. Smith wanted the score to have a "contemporary John Hughes feel along with a classic 'high school movie' vibe and the orchestral scale and emotion of E.T. on top".[29] The score was recorded at Abbey Road Studios and Air Studios in London, England.

Jackman composed most of the tracks, with two songs in collaboration with Dave Bayley of the indie-pop band Glass Animals.[30] Liam Payne performed an original song titled "Sunshine" and its music video was released on August 27, 2021. The soundtrack was released digitally on October 15, 2021 by Walt Disney Records and in physical formats on October 22.[31]

Release[]

In October 2017, Ron's Gone Wrong was scheduled for a theatrical release on November 6, 2020.[32] In November 2019, the film was moved to February 26, 2021.[33] In May 2020, the film was moved to April 23, 2021 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.[34][35] On January 22, 2021, the film was then delayed further to October 22, 2021 in RealD 3D originally.[36] The film also had its world premiere as the headlining act of the 2021 BFI London Film Festival on October 9, 2021 making it a Special BFI Presentation.[37][38] On the same date, the film premiered at the 36th Guadalajara International Film Festival's Guadalajara opening celebration event.[37] The film was premiered in United Kingdom on October 15, 2021. The film also held a special surprise screening premiere at the El Capitan Theatre on the day of its USA theatrical release date of October 22, 2021.[39] The film played exclusively in theaters for 45 days before heading to digital platforms.[40]

The film is also the only film under Locksmith's deal with 20th Century Studios, as the animation studio struck a new deal with Warner Bros. Pictures to distribute future films under Warner Animation Group.[11]

Marketing and promotion[]

TOMY made a deal with 20th Century Studios and Locksmith Animation to develop and promote the film's toys including plush toys and action figures.[41]

Home media[]

Ron's Gone Wrong was released on DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray on December 7, 2021 and on Digital on December 15, 2021 by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment.[42] Special features include Questions and Answers with Jack Dylan Grazer and Zach Galifianakis called "A Boy and His B-bot", a Making Ron Right featurette and the music video of the film's soundtrack album's one and only original hit song called "Sunshine" by English singer and songwriter Liam Payne. Ron's Gone Wrong became available for streaming on HBO Max and Disney+ on December 15, 2021, after Disney reached a deal with WarnerMedia for a majority of the upcoming films from 20th Century Studios to be streamed collaboratively between Disney+, HBO Max and Hulu until HBO's deal with 20th Century, signed before Disney's acquisition of the company in 2012, runs out at the end of 2022. Ron's Gone Wrong also made its American television premiere on HBO on December 18, 2021.[43]

Reception[]

Box office[]

Ron's Gone Wrong grossed $23 million in the United States and Canada and $37.7 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $60.7 million. In the United States and Canada, the film was released alongside Dune and was projected to gross around $10 million from 3,065 theaters in its opening weekend.[44] The film made $2.3 million on its first day, including $260,000 from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut in fifth place with $7.3 million. On its second weekend, the film fell 48% and made $3.7 million.[45] Brennan Klein of Screen Rant speculated the film to be a box office disappointment due to its low performance and undisclosed budget.[46]

Critical response[]

Ron's Gone Wrong received generally positive reviews from critics. On the review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 80% with a "Certified Fresh" rating, based on 100 reviews, with an average rating of 6.6/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "It isn't the first animated film to confront technology creep, but in terms of striking an entertaining balance between humor and heart, Ron's Gone Wrong gets it right." On Metacritic, the film has a score of 65 out of 100 based on 23 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.[47]

James Mottram of The South China Morning Post wrote: "sweet, heart-warming and frighteningly prescient, Ron's Gone Wrong is one of the best animated films in recent memory."[48] Tim Robey of The Daily Telegraph gave the film four out of five stars and said that the film is "visualized with verve" and that "it's a zingy and mercilessly funny satire on how devices, with their ever-so-friendly interfaces, have in fact become our despots."[49] Ben Kenigsberg of The New York Times said "As family entertainment, it's fine."[50] Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian gave the film three out of five stars, saying that the film was "entertaining, though composed with algorithmic precision", adding that "it winds up suspiciously neutral about whether kids really should abandon digital enslavement in favour of real-life human friends."[51] Pat Padua of The Washington Post gave the film three out of four stars, writing that it "has plenty of slapstick and potty humor for kids. But adults will also be intrigued by its frequently scathing (albeit somewhat conflicted) critique of consumerism."[52] Mark Kermode said that the film was "really good fun and a real surprise."[53]

Audience viewership[]

According to Nielsen ratings, Ron's Gone Wrong was the third most streamed feature film worldwide across all major platforms between December 13 and December 19, 2021.[54] Screen Rant reported that within the United States it was the most viewed feature film on Disney+ after two days of appearing on the service on December 15.[46]

Accolades, awards and nominations[]

Year Award Category Nominees and recipients Result
2022 Annie Awards[55] Outstanding Achievement for Character Design in an Animated Feature Julien Bizat Nominated
Outstanding Achievement for Production Design on an Animated Feature Aurélien Predal, Till Nowak and Nathan Crowley Nominated
British Animation Awards[56] Best Long Form Sarah Smith, Jean-Philippe Vine and Octavio E. Rodriguez Won
Best Design Won
Writers Award Sarah Smith and Peter Baynham Nominated

Trivia[]

  • There are several B-Bots that resemble Stormtroopers and Darth Vader from Star Wars as well as Iron Man, Black Panther, and Captain Marvel from Marvel. 20th Century Studios, Lucasfilm, and Marvel Entertainment are all subsidiaries of The Walt Disney Company, who distributed the film.
  • Inside the Bubble control center, one of the techs is dressed like Dennis Nedry (Wayne Knight) from Jurassic Park, complete with loud Hawaiian shirt.
  • Ron emits a sound of a 56k Dial-Up modem at one point, the device people used in the past to connect to the Internet.
  • Before the end credits start to roll, a malfunction appears on the screen showing the "Critical error: BFF4LYF3YO" emulating the infamous 'Blue Screen Of Death'. This message used to appear in old Windows operating systems when a rogue program tried to perform a forbidden process leading to a system crash. The letters "BFF4LYF3YO" are leetspeak meaning Best Friends Forever For Life Yo'.
    • The end credits for the film have 8-bit depictions of the movie in the style of MS-DOS.
  • The second film released in 2021 about personal, social media tech that goes wrong, after The Mitchells vs. The Machines. Both also star Olivia Colman, and feature young technology inventors named Mark/Marc.

Gallery[]

Posters[]

Videos[]

References[]

  1. "Exclusive: Locksmith & 20th Century Debut 'Ron's Gone Wrong' Imagery", Animation Magazine, January 26, 2021. 
  2. "Warner Signs Multi-Picture Deal With Elisabeth Murdoch's Locksmith Animation", Variety, October 31, 2019. (in en) 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Spotlight On...Locksmith Animation: 250 crew working from home to produce their first feature (in en-GB).
  4. 4.0 4.1 Ron's Gone Wrong – Trailer and Interview (9 September 2021).
  5. 'Ron's Gone Wrong': the team behind new UK animation studio Locksmith discuss its first feature (January 18, 2022).
  6. Paramount and Locksmith Animation Enter Exclusive Multi-Pic Deal. Animation Magazine (May 4, 2016).
  7. 7.0 7.1 Fox, Locksmith Animation Ink Multi-Year Production, Development Deal (EXCLUSIVE) (September 20, 2017).
  8. UK's Locksmith Animation Announces Production Agreement with 20th Century Fox (September 20, 2017).
  9. "Friendship in the Digital Age: "Ron's Gone Wrong" Creative Team Talk About the First Locksmith Animated Feature at Annecy Festival", June 16, 2021. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Interview with The directors of RON'S GONE WRONG (October 11, 2021).
  11. 11.0 11.1 "Warner Signs Multi-Picture Deal With Elisabeth Murdoch's Locksmith Animation", Variety, October 31, 2019. (in en) 
  12. 20th Century Fox & Locksmith Animation Slate 'Ron's Gone Wrong' As First Project (October 12, 2017).
  13. Fox, Locksmith Animation Unveil 'Ron's Gone Wrong' (October 12, 2017).
  14. Ron's Gone Wrong's Jack Dylan Grazer said he'd "absolutely" love to do a sequel (October 14, 2021).
  15. Animation Spotlight: Ron's Gone Wrong Director Sarah Smith on Helping to Create a UK Animation Scene (October 22, 2021).
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 Getting thing right with "Ron's Gone Wrong" (November 9, 2021).
  17. Ron's Gone Wrong Trailer Breakdown With Directors Sarah Smith And Jean-Philippe Vine (June 8, 2021).
  18. Bill Desowitz (September 9, 2021). 'Ron's Gone Wrong' Trailer: Animating Tech Frustration and a Defective Robot with an All-Star Cast.
  19. 'Encanto,' 'Flee' and 'The Mitchells vs. the Machines' Artists Detail How They Designed Their Animated Characters (January 5, 2022).
  20. Interview: Ron's Gone Wrong directors Sarah Smith and Jean-Philippe Vine on addressing social media and physical separation (June 10, 2021).
  21. Ron's Gone Wrong (November 15, 2021).
  22. Louise Dixon. London animation studio adapts to finish Disney film (in en).
  23. Zahed, Ramin (2020-04-20). COVID-19 Chronicles: Locksmith Animation Zooms with Creative Touch (in en-US).
  24. DNEG's Planned Pay Cuts Reversed For Some Feature Animation Staff Working On 'Ron's Gone Wrong' (21 May 2020).
  25. DNEG forced to strike improved pay deal with business partners after staff stick together (20 May 2020).
  26. Henry Jackman Scoring Locksmith Animation's 'Ron's Gone Wrong' (February 9, 2021).
  27. Staff, Laughing Place (2021-04-21). Interview: Henry Jackman on Composing for " The Falcon and the Winter Soldier" and More (in en-US).
  28. Composer Henry Jackman on the Complexities of Scoring The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (in en-US) (2021-05-04).
  29. Ron's Gone Wrong Directors On The "Contemporary John Hughes" Soundtrack And Explain The Film's Unique Animation Style - The Illuminerdi (in en-us) (2021-10-21).
  30. 'Ron's Gone Wrong' Soundtrack Album Details (in en-US).
  31. (in en) Ron's Gone Wrong (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack), 2021-10-15, https://open.spotify.com/album/71ypPSF9TOPCFuFVnKqg1u, retrieved 2022-05-23
  32. D'Alessandro, Anthony (October 12, 2017). 'Gambit' Starring Channing Tatum Will Open Valentine's Day 2019.
  33. Disney Sets Five MCU Films, Delays Others (November 15, 2019).
  34. D'Alessandro, Anthony (May 13, 2020). Disney Reschedules 'The New Mutants' & 'Ron's Gone Wrong'.
  35. 'Ron's Gone Wrong' Trailer: Animating Tech Frustration and a Defective Robot with an All-Star Cast (September 9, 2021).
  36. Bob's Burgers Movie, The King's Man Get Disney Film Delays. IGN (January 22, 2021).
  37. 37.0 37.1 Grater, Tom (September 7, 2021). London Film Festival Chief Talks Mask-Wearing In Cinemas, How Many Filmmakers Will Attend & Landing 'Succession' S3 Premiere. Deadline.
  38. BFI Lond Film Festival.
  39. Mike Celestino (October 22, 2021). Event Recap: "Ron's Gone Wrong" Opening Night Fan Event at Hollywood's El Capitan Theatre.
  40. Disney Releasing 'Eternals,' 'Encanto' Exclusively in Theaters (September 10, 2021).
  41. TOMY Awarded Master Toy License for Upcoming Animated Film Ron's Gone Wrong from Disney and Locksmith Animation (October 16, 2020).
  42. Milligan, Mercedes (November 17, 2021). 'Ron's Gone Wrong' Brings High-Tech Buddy Adventure Home in December.
  43. Spangler, Todd (2021-11-22). Disney, WarnerMedia Carve Up Fox Film Slate Streaming Rights Through End of 2022 (EXCLUSIVE) (in en-US).
  44. 'Dune' Looks To Make A Difference In Theaters & HBO Max With $70M+ Global Weekend (October 20, 2021).
  45. Anthony D'Alessandro (October 24, 2021). 'Dune' Domestic Opening Is Best For Warner Bros HBO Max Day/Date Title & Denis Villeneuve.
  46. 46.0 46.1 Disney+ Has a Surprising Film in Their #1 Spot for Top 10 Movies (December 19, 2021).
  47. Could Ron's Gone Wrong Get A Sequel? Here's What The Filmmakers Say (October 27, 2021).
  48. Mottram, James (2021-10-11). Ron's Gone Wrong: making friends with robots in animated gem (in en).
  49. Robey, Tim. "Ron's Gone Wrong, review: Black Mirror for kids, but without the apocalyptic despair", The Telegraph, 2021-10-09. (in en-GB) 
  50. Kenigsberg, Ben. "'Ron's Gone Wrong' Review: Still Under Warranty", The New York Times, 2021-10-21. (in en-US) 
  51. Bradshaw, Peter (2021-10-09). Ron's Gone Wrong review – a cheeky tech spin on ET (in en).
  52. Padua, Pat. "Review | 'Ron's Gone Wrong' movie mixes silly slapstick with clever cultural critique", October 18, 2021. (in en-US) 
  53. Kermode, Mark (October 15, 2021). Ron's Gone Wrong reviewed by Mark Kermode.
  54. 'Encanto,' 'Don't Look Up' Top Streaming Movie Chart With Massive Viewership (January 27, 2022).
  55. 'The Mitchells vs. the Machines' Wins Big at Annie Awards (March 12, 2022).
  56. 'Ron's Gone Wrong' Wins Best Feature at British Animation Awards 2022 (March 10, 2022).

External links[]

Wikipedia
This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original article was at Ron's Gone Wrong. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with MOVIEPEDIA, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
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