D.A.R.Y.L. Movie Review
D.A.R.Y.L. Review
"D.A.R.Y.L." Overview

Rating: PG
1985
Cast and Crew
Director : Simon WincerProducer : John Heyman
Screenwiter : David Ambrose,Allan Scott,Jeffrey Ellis
Starring : Mary Beth Hurt,Michael McKean,Kathryn Walker,Colleen Camp,Josef Sommer,Ron Frazier,Steve Ryan,David Wohl,Danny Corkill,Amy Linker,Barret Oliver
Do guilty pleasures get any more guilty or any more pleasurable than 1985's
D.A.R.Y.L., the famed robo-kid flick?
I think not.
D.A.R.Y.L. is technological nonsense, but it's a hell of a lot of fun on its
road to feelin' good. Barret Oliver (long since vanished from the cinema scene)
plays a young boy dropped off in the woods under mysterious circumstances. He's
partially amnesiac, and after being discovered and taking up residence with a
foster family, he soon reveals he's got amazing physical and (especially)
mental powers. Fast forward to his inevitable pick-up by a clinically cold
couple, who reveal the truth: Daryl isn't Daryl, he's D.A.R.Y.L., Data
Analyzing Robot Youth Lifeform. (This isn't a spoiler. It says so on the front
of the DVD.) Army isn't happy that a robot kid has developed emotions,
scientists can't cope with terminating a living being... escape and chase
ensues.
Whew! The technology of D.A.R.Y.L. is absurd yet strangely compelling. But it's
Daryl's interpersonal relationships that make it such a cotton candy winner.
Daryl's little friend Turtle (Danny Corkill, who would later become infamous as
the title character of Problem Child) gets the pair into trouble, teaches him a
bit about the birds and the bees, and brings out his humanity. Daryl's
relationship with his foster parents (especially Michael McKean in a very rare
"straight" role) adds the necessary family element. Hell, I wished McKean was
my dad after watching this movie.
Director Simon Wincer (Free Willy) does nice work blending technology, action,
and family-friendly feel-goodness. Too bad the DVD is missing any kind of
extras at all. Namely, I just want to know where I can adopt my own robot kid
that will wash his own dishes.
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Review by Christopher Null
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