Directed by:
Andrew StantonCinematography:
Jeremy LaskyComposer:
Thomas NewmanCast:
Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight, Jeff Garlin, Sigourney Weaver, Fred Willard, Kathy Najimy, MacInTalk, Kim Kopf, Garrett Palmer, Teddy Newton, Jim Ward, Pete Docter (more)Plots(1)
After hundreds of lonely years of doing what he was built for, the curious and lovable WALL•E discovers a new purpose in life when he meets a sleek search robot named EVE. (official distributor synopsis)
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Reviews (11)
Cute, visually breathtaking, quite shallow in terms of content and cheaply moralistic, but if you take it as an eco-fairy tale created by playful Pixar children, it cannot disappoint. There are plenty of spikes in the humor, beautiful places and nice music, so it's easy to forgive that it's blinded by a very permeable and shallow story. It is a film for children... maybe overgrown children, but still children. WALL-E works. ()
No. 5 is alive! And he still is, while his rust-bucket descendant, Wall-E, loses his life in the first half of this movie. This brutal murder was committed by the guys at Pixar because they were unable to come up with a sturdy storyline. Or that’s how I imagined things were after reading the reviews before watching. And fundamentally they are right. However, I didn’t mind at all, because those peepers with their constantly focusing lenses soon had me completely in their power. Too bad that the gala performance by the nicest animated character for the past several seasons is spoiled by the cursed human race. Paradoxically, Pixar gave the machines a soul, but not to people (I know that this was partially the intention, but still...). Inorganic beings in this movie are overflowing with feeling and spontaneity, while all organic forms are infuriating and deserve total eradication. Along with green activists. However, everywhere where the robots come out on top, a full set of stars isn’t enough, and, conversely, I would barely award three stars for the places where people make an appearance. Lucky that we see much more of robots in this movie. ()
Perceiving WALL-E as just a pleasant fairy tale about robots in love is a bit misguided. Pixar has its stuff down to a science. The initial retro atmosphere, the work with film references, Newman's music, the fantastic visuals, and the admittedly primitive, yet incredibly energetic story, which doesn't sell its ecological message and criticism of consumerism as cheaply as it might seem, are proof of clever creative minds that are simply good at what they do, no matter what some of the stodgy scrooges around them think. Pixar films have a heart as big as the world economic crisis and I’m happy to be entertained and moved by them again and again. ()
WALL-E is now one of my favorite Pixar animations. I absolutely had no idea what to expect from it, but the unattractive-looking robot turned out to be a cute and funny buddy, who is crazy about another "Apple-like" robot. As it often happens, the old and shabby garbage collector VALL-I has the most endless job in the world - processing a huge amount of waste bit by bit. However, one day his luck changes when EVA, a very aloof robot, lands on planet Earth. The seduction act is one of the most entertaining parts of the film, and everyone will have a great time watching it. So many graceful movements, supported by great animation, I haven't seen in an animation for a long time. The overly grand second part doesn't spoil the impression, although everyone will especially enjoy the first part. This really turned out well! ...100% ()
I have to admit that the beginning was literally torture for me... so boring! But then we were transported aboard a ship with overweight... well, fat people. And that's where the movie kind of started for me. I most enjoyed sitting with the captain and his amazement. "What's a ball? What's a dance?" plus his first steps and the music.... this was just divine! :-) The ending is clear, Wall-E and the tough Eve end up together... "Children, you will grow plants of all kinds... pizza plants!" XoD this ending wasn't bad :-) ()
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