Les Miserobots (1968) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Decent if predictable Inspector short
llltdesq20 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This is an Inspector short from Depatie-Freleng. There will be spoilers ahead:

The Inspector loses his job to a robot and decides that the only way to get his job back is by getting rid of the robot. That's pretty much all there is to this one.

Everything The Inspector tries is a failure, mostly as a combination of his incompetence and the effectiveness of the robot. The gags are pretty standard and a tad predictable. Clouseau just isn't much of a nemesis for his replacement.

The robot does his job so well that there are other far reaching consequences, equally predictable. The ending of the short is the best gag in the whole thing.

This short is available on DVD on one of the two The Inspector DVDs which showcase all 34 of the shorts in the series. The DVDs are well worth getting.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Robot crisis
TheLittleSongbird20 September 2019
Making up DePatie-Freleng Enterprises' The Inspector series, one of their most famous characters and one of their better known and better quality-wise theatrical series, are thirty four cartoons. The first being 1965's 'The Great De Gaulle Stone Operation' and the last being 1969's 'Carte Blanched'. A series mostly well worth watching with even some very good to great efforts, though would be lying if saying all of them are great, some being very, very average. Like The Inspector too as a character.

'Les Miserobots' for me is one of the high-middle The Inspector cartoons. Another one of those well done and enjoyable but nothing mind-blowing outings in the series, that is recommended as a well worth watching one but not an essential. 'Les Miserobots' may not be one of the Inspector's funniest or most imaginative, but it is above average, would actually consider it pretty decent with a lot to like.

The story is as flimsy as it comes and that one knows what's going to happen next in the story action the whole time takes away from the surprise somewhat.

Although The Inspector is an amusing and endearing character as always, this is a rare case of between him and his adversary of him being the weaker character with there being some uncharacteristic blandness occasionally, his humour being sharper and more ironic in other cartoons of his.

Still like him very much, but here the funnier and more interesting character here is the robot, a rare The Inspector foil that The Inspector is actually no match for. 'Les Miserobots' is far from short-changed when it comes to the humour, and although little of it is hilarious and they are standard the gags are still well timed and humorous. Have noticed that with a lot of The Inspector cartoons the ending is the best part, and actually that's the case here too. The bumbling does amuse and doesn't get tiresome and the verbal humour has enough wit to it, both have been stronger though elsewhere.

Once again, the animation is fine and unmistakably distinctive DePatie-Freleng in style. Simple but always attractive, with nice attention to detail and especially striking were the rich colours. The music never sounds cheap and doesn't get bombastic or manic, regardless of the energy. It is hard to think of a better voice for The Inspector than that of Pat Harrington Jr.

In summary, decent. 7/10
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
French literature specialists consider this sixth . . .
pixrox124 August 2023
. . . film adaptation of Victor Hugo's 2,783-page 1862 novel to be the most faithful to the book that virtually no one alive in 2023 has read in its entirety. Hugo was in the habit of digressing, and his version of LES MISERABLE includes about 955 pages of essays which have nothing to do with any of the characters in his book. Many of these side-track excursions involved examinations in the field of what's known as Artificial Intelligence, or AI, Today. Faithful to the spirit of such inquiries, this picture asks what would happen if a robot cop captured Jean Val Jean in 30 seconds, rather than the 30 years required by Inspector Javelin? The answer turns out to be that this ruins the whole Fabric of Society, let alone the film story.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed