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WALL-E

Rated - 5 stars

Currently ranked at number 19 in the Internet Movie Database list of the top 250 films ever made, WALL-E arrives on our shores riding a wave of rave reviews and box office success. No mean accomplishment for a movie about a trash compactor. WALL-E can’t even talk, though he does manage an ingratiating burble and squeak.

The latest from Pixar has been in development for a long time, as far back as the first Toy Story (which writer-director Andrew Stanton has a script credit on). Even for this bold studio, it can’t have been an easy sell: a dystopian sci-fi movie set on an abandoned earth, and a love story between two inanimate objects, with virtually no dialogue for the first half hour? I don’t know how you would go about pitching a movie like this, but if Stanton was honest, he’d have had to say it’s something like Stanley Kubrick’s 2001 meets Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times.

Now that’s a strange combination. Kubrick is the rigorous logician, a cold, misanthropic rationalist (or at least, that’s often how people see him). Chaplin, on the other hand, came from Victorian melodrama, he was a brilliant filmmaker, and an agonizing perfectionist like Kubrick, but he was also shamelessly sentimental. But somehow this mixture of hot and cold, sweet and sour works a treat. WALL-E is a masterpiece, certainly one of Pixar’s greatest achievements, and one of the best movies you will see from anywhere this year.

Fast-forward 700 years. The world is a toxic dustbowl, and mankind has flown the coop. A rusty box sitting on caterpillar tracks, with a retractable binocular-shaped head, WALL-E is the last robot. He compresses junk into building blocks then piles them up into towers, shadow-skyscrapers of waste in the ruins of an unidentified city.

WALL-E, we gather, has developed more than a trace of consciousness. He’s a hoarder, curious enough to collect unusual bric-a-brac: a whisk; an electric light bulb; bubble wrap. He’s also terribly alone (an undemonstative pet cockroach excepted).

His most treasured item is a VHS of “Hello, Dolly” – he particularly warms to a scene with Michael Crawford taking Marianne McAndrew by the hand, input that leaves his systems scrambling when he bumps into Eve, a gleaming research pod sent down by our descendents on the mother ship. She (and she is a she) is WALLE’s first visitor of the millennium. Eve’s sleek, egg-like design and distinctive start-up chime must be a wink to Pixar boss Steve Jobs. At any rate, she is the apple of WALL-E’s eye. He’s so smitten he’d follow her anywhere – even out there, into space. Smarter than he is, and far more developed, she doesn’t exactly reciprocate. In fact there’s a real possibility she’s going to blow him into smithereens. That’s love, I guess.

Robots have often been humanized in sci-fi movies – in Blade Runner, AI, and Metropolis, for example. Douglas Trumbull’s Silent Running with its eco-message and boxy robots Huey, Dewey and Louie is another obvious touchstone. Nor is WALL-E alone in implying that human beings are becoming more mechanistic ourselves, but the obese overgrown-babies Stanton imagines in the film’s second half, reclining in hover chairs, pampered and cocooned from birth is a particularly scathing caricature of consumer over-dependency.

This second half is more conventional than the first, less delicate and inevitably more broad-brush. Even so, you can still distinguish the influence of slapstick masters like Chaplin, Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton (apparently Stanton and co immersed themselves in silent comedy for a year and a half).

WALL-E may not be a perfect movie. Some business involving a team of rogue robots is unduly scrappy and it can’t quite see through the tragic implications that seem to be called for – but it’s filled with grace and beauty.

The animation is superb. The rendering of the smoggy abandoned planet; gleaming futuristic technology; the nebulous beauty of the Milky Way are, what’s the phrase? Out of this world.

A pas-de-deux in zero gravity (Wall-E using a fire extinguisher for propulsion); Eve’s immediate effect on a previously dim lightbulb; her maternal glow as she carries out her primary directive; or the fleeting moment when first-time space traveler Wall-E turns back and sees the Earth, and tries to share his joy in the discovery… These are rare and precious treasures.

You definitely don’t need a child to see this picture, but do go with someone you love – and hold hands in the dark.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 5 
	  stars out of 5 Dave Calhoun, Time Out

Humans land a raw deal when it comes to animations. We upright, two-legged creatures regularly have to give way to the... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsDirective Completed - Mission Successful!

hunkydomste hunkydomste from Liverpool [Highly rated reviewer] , 18/07/2008

Let's get it out of the way then: Wall-E is absolutely wonderful. Forget the 'Short Circuit' and 'ET' referencing. Go and watch this film and see it for what it is: something unique.

So Wall-E has finally arrived, after much hype and after having been in the Pixar pipeline since they first set out on their animation adventures. Always sceptical of 'the next big thing', I was surprised to find myself quite willingly swept up (ahem...) by this unconventionally cute waste disposal robot's tidal preliminaries.

And this is where Pixar get there first lot of brownie points from me. In Wall-E they have created this adorable character, yet the film does by no means rely on 'cute' or 'giggle' factor. Do not get me wrong, there are laughs, chuckles, sighs, sniggers, and aww's galore. This, however, is in my opinion the least 'kiddy' movie Pixar have yet produced.

The opening scenes are awe inspiring and set the tone. Earth is totally mounted in waste, desolate and abandoned- a Dystopia. Sweeping glides over an American futuristic city show only piles and piles of garbage, in places cubed and stacked up by the only moving thing in sight: Wall-E. Look closer and you get to meet his little sidekick, a cockroach that follows Wall-E around and lives with him. Yes, it is adorable, watching a robot pile up tons of our left over rubbish (human kind has long since escaped the planet), but taking the time to collect a few souvenirs (Rubik's cube, plastic spoons, video tapes of old fashioned musical movies). But with Wall-E switching on in the mornings, grumpy and sleepy before he goes to work, he is so very human like and yet not- down to the fact that he appreciates the 'little things' and is a true romantic.

Enter Eve, the 'female' Robot sent to Earth on a 'secrete directive'- and Wall-E's love object to be.

What follows is a blend of an estranged love story and rescue mission, any further details might spoil the story, so I will behave.

The ingredients that will make Wall-E superior to other Pixar movies (and indeed films in general) are the absence of dialogue for a major part of the film. Clicks, whirls, electronic words maybe, but no snappy one-liners to keep you on board. Just a visual fest and details that are masterful and a characterisation of Wall-E and Eve that is so touching in places, it will melt even the biggest cynic.

When the humans do enter, they are all but props- and just another reminder of the question: Is this what you want your future to be like?

Wall-E is a masterpiece and deserves all the credit it will get.

SEE THIS IF YOU LIKED

* Toy Story

* 2001 A Space Odyssee

* Finding Nemo

  206 out of 208 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 1 starNumbs mind & bum in equal measure

A customer from 2nd row from the back, Lincolnshire , 22/08/2008

Boring, preachy, over hyped, over long, dull, irritating, dreary.

How long are you prepared to watch one tin can gaze meaningfully into the eyes of another tin can?

  111 out of 132 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starswall.e

A customer from Chatham , 17/07/2008

the trailer to wall.e was really good but could be better by making it different to other cartoon film's . Evening so i can't wait to watch wall.e

  59 out of 67 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsAnother Classic !

A customer from Edinburgh , 12/07/2008

WALL-E is the latest movie from the geniuses that are Disney Pixar. Unsuprisingly, once again the animation on this film is truly spectacular, possibly surpassing anything produced before. As usual these clever fellows have produced, in WALL-E, another masterpiece that captures the attention of young and old with many different layers of social commentary and entertainment. It really is a movie for the toddlers and there Grannies. No change there.

What I did find surprising from the film though was the gloomy, melancholy tone to the start of WALL-E. Yes, the subject matter is deeply concerning, but there was a deffinate break from the norm when deciding to open the film in such a cheerless manner. Something I never expected from a Disney creation. Certainly nothing like the other DP films. Perhaps the unexpectedness of the opening minutes does really help to drive home the importance of the situation.

Don't let me put you off with the talk of gloomyness though as the film is almost immediately lifted by the instantly loveable main charachter ( even if he does bare a remarkable resemblelance to E.T. ) and the usual clever humour that we have come to expect from DP. The film makers subtly remind us of our shortcomings whilst praising our most admorable human qualities via WALL-E.

An important message delivered with fun and entertainment. These guys are good !

  27 out of 28 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 starsWall E

Wynter Wynter from UK [Highly rated reviewer] , 08/09/2008

Well, Pixar have done it again; WALL-E is yet another entertaining film from the people at the forefront of modern studio animation …and everyone else seems to agree, citing it’s similarity to numerous sources ranging from Chaplin to Silent Running but for me the latter is much more in evidence than the former and this points towards the film’s only weak area…

WALL-E himself is the last of numerous droids left behind to clean up Earth when it became too polluted for humans to remain there and unfortunately he is also one of numerous objects that could have filled the central role. Sure, he is a nice little character but they could substitute him for a puppy dog or a sock puppet without any real complication - he is no E.T. or Gizmo. It is therefore a testament to the overall quality of the film that, even with this lack at it’s core, it still manages to be a captivating movie.

The world in which the story takes place is simply astonishing both in looks and conception. The animation is stunning as usual and the film takes in and relays large sci-fi concepts that had me thinking of authors such as Ray Bradbury and Poul Anderson. Add to this a highly inventive supporting cast of biological and mechanical characters (cleaning robot M-O being my favourite) plus a directorial style that comes closer to mimicking the presence of an actual camera than any other animation I have seen and you have a hugely impressive movie.

Pixar still haven’t topped The Incredibles but this is certainly not far off.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsSuch a classic, everyone must see this

A customer from Wirral , 29/11/2008

A poignant, funny, and romantic masterpiece. Should win the Oscar for best film, never mind animated film!

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful

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