The Electric State (2025) directed by Anthony and Joe Russo
Back in an alternate 1990s, the world's population was served by a variety of service robots. These robots became frustrated with being used as slave labor and rose up against the humans. A war broke out that humans were losing until Sentre (run by Ethan Skate (Stanley Tucci)) made a VR technology to enable humans to interface in real time with drone versions of themselves. This discovery created mechanically equal warriors who were able to outfight the robots, resulting in a peace treaty in 1994. The robots (lead by Mr. Peanut (voiced by Woody Harrelson)) were exiled to a walled-off wasteland in the middle of the United States. Humans continue to use the VR tech as a way to detach from reality and get things done with stronger drone bodies than they could ever have or visit places without actually going there. Lots of people stay in Sentre's VR tech practically full time.
Michelle (Millie Bobby Brown) lost her family (two parents and her genius younger brother) during the war and has been living in foster homes. Her latest home is run-down with a foster-parent who is exploiting her for money, making her go to school and insisting on after-school activities that he will get paid for. She finds a robot has wandered into the house, something completely illegal. She realizes it is housing her brother's consciousness. They escape the home and head west to find his body.
The story moves along in a haphazard fashion as she travels to the wasteland which is off limits for humans. She gets inside with the help of a smuggler (Chris Pratt) and his robot pal (voiced by Anthony Mackie). The plot gets more intriguing from there as they learn more about the robots and about the larger situation. The resolution deals with the robot threat and the VR threat.
The movie has a lot of interesting issues but never delves into any of them in interesting ways. There's the "robots are humans/have rights" bit that should feel more compelling. VR addiction is depicted as bad but doesn't get explored too much and by the end it seems like plenty of people (employees of Sentre) are perfectly able to manage their VR use. The actors are good but they don't have a lot to work with plotwise. The characters change motivations with little cause and sometimes their behavior just doesn't fit. The visual effects are amazing and fun to watch. The fight scenes are perfunctory with little stakes as robots fight drones. It reminded me, not in a good way, of the Gungans versus the Battle Droids in Star Wars Episode I. With all the talent involved (the Russos directed a lot of top-notch Marvel films), I expected more.
Barely recommended. I'm not sorry I watched it but I have no desire to rewatch it.