My Life as a Teenage Robot (film)/Tropes

My Life as a Teenage Robot is a film franchise based on the Nickelodeon TV series lf the same name, and produced by Paramount Animation and Nickelodeon Animation Studio. Much like the series, the franchise centers on Jenny Wakeman, a robot created to be the Earth's best defender, who wishes to live a regular life as a teenager. The franchise is composed of two theatrical films, a TV series, and a short series.

Tropes for the franchise

 * Adaptational Angst Upgrade: The franchise depicts Jenny's struggle to live life as a teenager in a more dramatic light.
 * Adaptational Badass:
 * Vexus, in this version, is a far more physical threat to Jenny than in the original series, mainly due to her feline design.
 * Also, the Skyway Patrol is far more competent here, due to their new femake leader.
 * Adaptational Nice Guy/Adaptational Villany: Skyway Patrol as a whole fills both, with some officer being nice and willing to work with Jenny, and others being downright corrupt.
 * The "Adaptational Nice Guy" part does get downplayed:
 * While the Crust Cousins are still mean to Jenny, they never outright bully her.
 * Also, the town is explicity shown to not to have Fantastic Racism towards robots. Not that it prevents them from often mistreating Jenny.
 * Heartwarming Moments: Jenny and the new leader of Skyway Patrol actually getting along is one franchise-wide. Given how most people outside of her social circle treated Jenny like trash in the original series, having someone outside of said circle being as friendly as the rest of her friends towards her is a nice change of pace.
 * Also in a meta-level, since the new leader is voiced by Janice Kawaye, who voiced Jenny in the original show, in turn making each of their interactions feel as if Kawaye is giving her succesor some support in voicing the character.
 * Remake Cameo: Janice Kawaye, Jenny's voice actress in the original series, voices the second-in-command/new leader of Skyway Patrol.
 * Role Reprise: Cree Summer and Moira Quirk reprise their roles as the Crust Cousins from the original series.

Tropes for the film

 * Adaptational Karma: The deceased leader of Skyway Patrol suffers this big time. In the original series, his Jerkass actitude only costed him his job (and dignity). In the film, that actitude costs him his respect among his peers to the point that his second-in-comman and eventual succesor badmouths him whenever she can, suffers a lot of slapstick injuries, and he even gets killed in an over-the-top accident, with not even his fellow soldiers showing one bit of corncern about him.
 * An Aesop:
 * Jenny:
 * So what if the whole world dosen't like you, as whole as one person does it and for the right reasons, its OK.
 * There's far more than being human than just your biology.
 * Nora:
 * Family is not just whom you are biologically related with. Its those who love you and you love.
 * Never shut off your heart from loving someone.
 * Helen: Adventure is out there. So go for it.
 * Tuck: There are more important things in life than yourself.
 * And The Fandom Rejoiced: The announcenent of a fully animated My Life as a Teenage Robot film brought a lot of joy to fans of the original series, seeing how ot is perceived as one of Nickelodeon's most underrated series, so seeing it receive the feature-length film treatement was a welcome surprise.
 * Central Theme: The meaning of humanity.
 * Darker and Edgier: Sort of. While calling the film "dark" would be an inmense stretch, as it retains most of the original series' tone, the film does explore more profound themes than the series such as identity, family, and the meaning of humanity.
 * Disney Villain Death: Subverted with Vexus as part of a Shout-Out to The Emperor's New Groove.
 * Even Evil Has Standards: Vexus is an evil overlord, but she was geniunely outraged when she learn that Jenny left her home without telling her mother, claiming Jenny is a terrible daughter for leaving like that, and Nora is a terrible mother for lpcking her inside all the time, saying that she thinks childs should always be given certain freedoms and certain limits.
 * She also shows geniune disgust at how the deceased Skyway Patrol leader treated Jenny horribly for pure jealousy, claiming that "you should only treat others bad when they deserve it".
 * Hate Sink: Being the definition of Jerkass to the point every character in the film shows nothing but contempt towards him, the former Skyway Patrol leader clearly isn't someone audiences are meant to like or even enjoy to watch.
 * Heartwarming Moments: At the end of the film, as Jenny shows anxiety over going to school, Nora assures her everything will be fune by playing "Ain't No Mountin High" on her music player, as a way to tell hrr that, no matter what happens, she will aleays be her daughter, and she will always be with her when she needs her the most. This is followed by a montage of Jenny expending time at school, Helen and Tuck helping her friend, and Nora looking at a picture of Jenny in joy, befire the film closes with Jenny and her fruends leaving school to hang around together.
 * Jerks Are Worse Than Villains: While Vexus is an evil supervillain and the film's Big Bad, her Awesome Moments, funny scenes, and charisma prevent her from being completly unlikeable. The deceased Skyway Patrol leader, on the other hand, is such an unbearable Jerkass that when he got killed, the audience actually laughed both at how funny his death was and of relief for having that asshole gone.
 * Averted with the Crust Cousins, who are Jerks towards Jenny, but are as enoyable to watch as in the original series due to keeping nealry all of their characteristics.
 * LGBT Fanbase: Given how the original show already had one, this was expected.
 * Moment of Awesome: Jenny using a washbashin to punch one of Vexus' soldiers off the ground and onto a building at the opposite side of the town!
 * Mythology Gag:
 * The opening scene in which Jenny destroys a meteor is an homage to the ending of the pilot episode, where she did the same thing, albeit responding sooner to the threat and without Tuck.
 * The weapons Jenny uses against Vexus' army at the clikax are all taken straight out of the episode "Dressed to Kill", while the motorcycle form she takes is s reference to the episode "Voyage to the Planet of the Bikers".
 * Dyring the credits, Nora is seen showing Jenny an early version of her design, which is her design in the pilot for the original series.
 * The post-credits scene has Jenny hallucinating so she sees everything in the style of a Looney Tunes cartoon after being overloarded with energy, as an homage to the episode "Daydream Believer".
 * Playing Against Type: While Awkwafina has played many comedic characters, this is one of the few times she ever played a villain.
 * Shocking Moments: The fact that the filmmakers took a one-off gag from the series, Jenny having a washbashin inside her, and used it to creaye a scene worthy of being in a Dragon Ball film will surely be one for the fans.
 * Visual Effects of Awesome: As usual, Sony Pictures Imageworks displays a maestry when it combines 2D style with CG animation with this film, creating visuals that truly feel respectful of the original series' style.
 * Win Back the Crowd: When it was announced that the film would be made with CG animation, fans were quite worried over how the characters' 2D designs would translate to 3D, but worties lessened when it was announced that Sony Pictures Imageworks, which already combined hand-drawn techniques with CGI in the films Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and The Mitchells vs. The Machines to universal acclaim. All worries were fully calmed down once footage of the film has released, displaying an animation style that stuck close to the original series while still displaying a lot of quality.

Tropes for the TV series

 * Ascended Extra:
 * Characters such as Jenny's sisters, Misty, and Melody appear in far more promenient roles than in the original series.
 * Armaggedroid appears as the main antagonist in season 2, whereas he only appeared twice in the original series.
 * Ascended Fridge Horror: Inverted. Fans originally worried over the idea of Jenny being locked with her sisters should Nora build an XJ-10. This series not only shows Nora choosing to permanently let the others be free, but specifically builds an XJ-10 for situations Jenny can't handle not even with her friends.
 * Central Theme:
 * Sisterhood and family are depicted as the main theme in seasons 2 and 4, througth Jenny's interactions with her extended family in season 2, and with X-J10 in season 4.
 * The complexities of morality is the main theme in season 3, througth Melody and Misty.
 * Darker and Edgier: Much like the film, the series featites greater character development abd more emotional themes than the original series, albeit still retaining much of the comedy.
 * Sitcom Arch-Nemesis: The Crust Cousins are depicted as this for Jenny.

Tropes for the short series

 * Lighter and Softer: The shorts generally ditch the superhero action and character development from the rest of the franchise in favor of a Slice of Life approach.
 * Slice of Life: The shorts generally center on Jenny's regular teenager life.
 * Truer to Text: Due to the lighter tone and focus on Jenny's life as a teenager, the shorts feel more faithful to the series than the rest of the franchise.
 * Whole Plot Reference: The "Rap Battle" short was written as an homage to the rap sequence in Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021).

Tropes for My Life as a Teenage Robit in Cluster Prime

 * Adaptation Expansion: The film fratures the evebts of the special Escape from Cluster Prime in far greater detail than the special, both physically and emotionally.
 * Villant Exit, Stage Left: Vexus attemots to flee from Jenny and Vega, but her propulsors fail and falls in front of an angry crowd, whom she also attempts to escape from, but fails when she is hit by a truck.