Yes, Alan Tudyk was in “I, Robot.”
The actor appeared in the 2004 sci-fil thriller as the robot Sonny via motion capture and voice acting, but he was totally absent from 20th Century Fox film’s marketing and press tour.
“A lot of people didn’t know I did Sonny the robot in ‘I, Robot,’ and there’s a reason for that, actually,” Tudyk, 54, recently stated on Jim Cummings’ “Toon’d In!” podcast.
“They were doing test audiences with the movie, and they score the characters in this kind of test audience, and I got word back, ‘Alan, you’re testing higher than Will Smith,’” he revealed.
“Then I was gone. I was done,” Tudyk added. “There was no publicity, and my name was not mentioned.”
Tudyk admitted that he was “so shocked” by the studio’s decision.
“I was like, ‘Wait, what? How do they — nobody’s going to know that I —’ and [Fox] was like, ‘Mhm,’” he recalled.
“It was sad,” Tudyk shared. “I put a lot into it, because he had to move like a robot, so I had to move [like a robot]. At the time, I was very upset.”
The Post has reached out to Smith’s reps and Disney, who owns 20th Century Studios, for comment.
Directed by Alex Proyas, “I, Robot” is about a Chicago police detective (Smith) who investigates the alleged suicide of a robotics company founder and becomes convinced that one of the robots, Sonny (Tudyk), murdered him.
The film, which also stars James Cromwell, Bridget Moynahan, Bruce Greenwood and Chi McBride, grossed over $346 million worldwide and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects.
After “I, Robot,” Tudyk did motion capture again for his role as droid K-2SO in the 2016 “Star Wars” film “Rogue One” and its Disney+ prequel series “Andor.”
Smith, for his part, talked about taking a “gamble” with “I, Robot” in a July 2004 interview with Black Film.
“I just loved the idea, the gamble of making this kind of movie, because it’s actually a small art film that is masquerading as a big summer blockbuster,” the Oscar winner said.
“You know like the interrogation scene of Sonny, I was looking at that scene last night like, you can’t compare that to anything,” Smith continued. “There’s no other movie where you have that level of emotion and connection with somebody interrogating, a detective interrogating a robot, without it being silly. I love the film and hope that people can connect to it.”