Walt Disney Pictures Presents Meet The Robinsons ((full)) Jun 2026
inspired by Tomorrowland at Disney Parks.
Rather than showing success as inevitable, the story treats failure as part of the creative process. The film’s mantra — “Keep moving forward” — emerges organically, not as a Hallmark slogan, but as a lesson earned through Lewis’s setbacks and the revelations about his past and future. Walt Disney Pictures Presents Meet The Robinsons
Directed by Stephen Anderson, who also voiced several characters. Source Material: Loosely based on the book A Day with Wilbur Robinson by William Joyce. Studio Pivot: inspired by Tomorrowland at Disney Parks
Because was the first fully digital 3D film from the studio after shutting down its traditional 2D department, the animators took risks. The character designs are rubbery, exaggerated, and almost Dr. Seuss-like in their eccentricity. The Robinson family home is a marvel of steampunk-meets-suburban architecture—a TARDIS-like structure that is bigger on the inside, featuring rocket launchers, bowling alleys, and trampoline floors. Directed by Stephen Anderson, who also voiced several
: Director Stephen Anderson lobbied for the project because, like Lewis, he was adopted and felt a deep personal connection to the story’s themes of belonging.
The Robinson family is wonderfully eccentric—from a singing frog to a giant robotic butler (Carl, who steals every scene). The future world feels like a retro-futurist’s dream, full of jetpacks, bubble transports, and wacky inventions. The animation (Disney’s first fully digital 3D feature without a 2D sequence) holds up well, though it looks dated compared to Pixar’s work from the same era.