It sounds like it could be the premise for a schlockfest: In the near future, an old man named Frank (Frank Langella) is losing his memory. His brain is addled with blackouts and spacey digressions at inopportune moments. Frankโ€™s son buys a caretaker robot to watch over him, and an unlikely friendship blossoms between the robot and the man. The hook to Robot & Frank, though, is that Frank has a history as a jewel thiefโ€”itโ€™s the reason for the metaphorical and literal distance between Frank and his kids and his estranged wifeโ€”and he soon enlists the robot as an accomplice on some heists. (The robot rightly decides that Frankโ€™s cognition improves when heโ€™s planning a job, so it goes along with the scheme for the good of its ward.) It all adds up to a surprisingly effective sci-fi movieโ€”a gentle, observant comedy that knows exactly how far to push before it treads into clichรฉd territory. One late-stage revelation doesnโ€™t quite work, but by then the movie has already charmed the hell out of you with its resistance to cloying life lessons. What starts as high-concept transforms into something low-key, kindhearted, and surprisingly resonant. Dear Hollywood: More sci-fi movies like this, please. recommended