SummaryAfter hundreds of lonely years of doing what he was built for, Wall-E discovers a new purpose in life when he meets a sleek search robot named EVE. [Walt Disney Pictures]
SummaryAfter hundreds of lonely years of doing what he was built for, Wall-E discovers a new purpose in life when he meets a sleek search robot named EVE. [Walt Disney Pictures]
To call WALL•E Pixar's best film would potentially denigrate films that deserve no scorn. But this is their most ambitious undertaking since "Toy Story" and storytelling of such charm and visual wit that it can stand proudly alongside the studio’s best. Absolute heaven.
WALL-E has been one of my childhood comfort movies for as long as I can remember, and even after rewatching it countless times, it still feels just as warm and special. It’s an easy 10/10 for me, not because it’s flashy or loud, but because it does so much with almost no dialogue. That little robot somehow manages to feel more alive and expressive than half the live-action characters I grew up watching.What I’ve always loved is how gentle the movie is. The whole first part with WALL-E just doing his routine, collecting little trinkets, watching old musicals — it’s simple but weirdly emotional. You really get pulled into his world without the movie ever explaining anything out loud. And every time Eve arrives, that shift in his life still feels magical, like he suddenly discovers something bigger than his lonely **** humor hasn’t aged at all either. WALL-E poking around the ship, the confused humans rolling around in their chairs, the little robots freaking out — it still makes me smile the same way it did when I was a kid.What makes the movie timeless for me is how hopeful it feels. Even with all the broken Earth imagery and the futuristic stuff, the heart of the story is just about connection, curiosity, and taking care of what matters. No big speeches, no heavy-handed messaging — just a robot doing his best and somehow reminding everyone else what being alive actually ****’s one of those films I can always go back to and get the exact same cozy feeling every single time. A true classic.
The animated movie everybody needs. Not just that, but I think that Pixar was a very important animation studio to exist & it was their very important movie to exist. I feel proud that earnt multiple awards. To start off, it is the animation, I never saw a worn down robot like Wall E look so realistic & rendered; I am unsure that I can say that with other movies from Pixar. This animation is just like a Blue Sky movie. The love story between Wall-E & Eve was not just a live story. They got to show each other their own worlds. Out of Wall Es collection of junk, he has an old boot with a plant in it. And Eve shows her where she lives, in an Axiom where humans helplessly got lazy staying there for a long time after Operation cleanup which was not succeeding. Wall E showed the boot with a plant & proved the Captain that there was hope on the planet. There were things to know more & it got better, better than the CEO of Buy n Large, Shelby Fortnight. Talking about Buy n Large, it is a mega corporation that plays a part in this story. It has been economically greedy & never getting around to saving the environment, no wonder they went that way. It is what companies like Disney are kind of becoming now (yet "Wall E" came from Disney themselves). There is another movie involving this issue, but its more different, coming from Blue Sky/FOXs "Robots", which Disney also bought & Blue Sky had to get shut down due to the economic impact of COVID-19. Companies need to learn from this movie so thay life does not end up in disaster in the future. THEORY: Selby Fortnight is either a holigram or originated from AI. Now, this movie could also mean the consequences of AI usage.
The visual design of Wall-E is arguably Pixar's best. Stanton, who wrote the script with Jim Reardon from a story he concocted with Peter Docter, creates two fantastically imaginative, breathtakingly lit worlds.
The first hour of Wall-E is a crazily inventive, deliriously engaging and almost wordless silent comedy of the sort that Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton used to make.
Greetings from Lithuania.
"WALL·E" (2008) is a great animated movie. Because its theme is so good, its story is so great and animation is so ingenues, it is safe to call this movie a true masterpiece. I've see this film many times during years, and i highly enjoyed it every single time. It is ingenues picture that was very risky one back in the day - it literally features no human for the majority of the movies first half, and only speaking parts are made by robots in a very robotic way. It is inspiring movie as well, and just a great science fiction story. The whole opening long sequence featuring WALL·E doin g his daily routine stuff in nothing short of a thing of beauty. And the music is perfectly done here.Overall, "WALL·E" is that one rare Pixar's masterpiece that is more enjoyable for grown ups then to the youngest ones. It has wonderful ideas and realizes them perfectly. This is one of the all time best animated movies.
Not a great movie, had a good beginning similar to Up and then once they introduce the fat people, the rest of the movie is a heap of garbage. I remember a time when animated movies were more than just a spectacle. They would back up the good animation with a good story. This movie is simply just a spectacle unfortunately.
Prior to watching this: I had liked the previous Pixar films except for UP. Review: Love the philosophical first half, disappointed by the simplistic and lazy second half. 3/5
Whyyyyyyyyyyyyy in the world does this movie have to be a must see hm? I am not happy with this movie all it was about was a robot saving the planet and there was that one scene that made me go.........."ugh no" and thinking about it is basically a nightmare.