Very impressive. When I first saw I, ROBOT (with Will Smith, 2004) I figured 2035 was optimistic for robots as sophisticated as those depicted. Now I think it is on the mark. Although, the robots in the movie also boasted a level of AI that may or may not be possible by then. (I don't know the current state of the art.)
One never knows the direction technology may take. For example, a sci-fi writer in the 1940s might have imagined wireless telephones as streamlined versions of contemporary radio devices. Breaking down the network into a cellular system solves many problems for the size of the send/receive hardware, the frequencies handled, etc. (Don't get me wrong, I'm not belittling the fractal antennas and IT infrastructure of the system.)
So perhaps AI robots like those in the movie I, ROBOT will exist by 2035-ish if the robots are networked to the actual "brains" driving them. (The movie showed the robots as independent, although a more complex computer was driving them in the "revolution.") For example, one action shown in the Boston Dynamics video made me think the unit is not ready for general use. When the robot was pushed forward so that it landed on its face, any user would have to know to stand back for what was coming next. A commercial model would have sensors for proximity of others, as well as a more sophisticated body that would allow it to gently climb back to its feet. (Will advanced models have electrolastic muscles like those seen in the movie?)
A production model would also have advances in vision that do not require the QR codes on the boxes and other items it needs to handle. Just the programming to deal with the variety of stylized door knobs (and other latches, etc.) might be daunting. Industrial robots might have special environments, but "everyday" robots sent into the world will have to be able to cope with anything... otherwise we might need RUNAWAY units (Tom Selleck, 1984) to deal with those robots that fall into the cracks in their programming.
"One small step for a robot, one giant leap for silicon-kind."