REVIEW

Movie Review: WALL•E

Written by Brandon Valentine
Published July 19, 2008

To say that WALL•E is solely a sweet and/or cute, kiddy picture is a gross understatement; the film is smart, visionary, touching, and revolutionary. It appeals to every sci-fi, art house, animation, and romance aficionado. To boot, while WALL•E is marketed more toward the little ones, it is geared toward humans of all shapes and sizes.

Earth – now a barren wasteland filled with garbage – is left to the last remaining trash-compacting robot, a Waste Allocation Load Lifter - Earth-Class, or WALL•E for short. While WALL•E’s (Ben Burtt) other robotic likenesses have ceased functioning, he continues to gather, compact, and stack trash like clockwork.

Throughout his workday, WALL•E finds treasures (like a Rubik’s cube, Zippo lighter, spork, jewelry box - but not the jewelry - and a seedling growing out of a work boot) and stores them in a tattered, old lunch cooler. As he returns home, WALL•E files his findings on a shelf full of collectibles. A cute moment occurs when WALL•E attempts to categorize the spork with a spoon or a fork, but then settles for somewhere in between.

One day, after WALL•E discovers a red laser beam shining on the Earth’s floor, he is greeted by EVE (Elissa Knight), a futuristic-looking, flying robot sent to Earth to follow a “classified” directive. While WALL•E instantly falls in love with EVE, EVE meets WALL•E with hostility and later apathy. However, when WALL•E tries to impress EVE by showing her the seedling he found, EVE sucks up the plant and goes into hibernation mode—triggering the spacecraft’s return to Earth. As EVE boards the spaceship, WALL•E refuses to let her go and hangs on for one wild ride. The spaceship soon lands aboard a much larger spacecraft called the Axiom. The Axiom houses humans and provides them both food through “sippy” cups and hovercraft “La-Z Boy” chairs. Since humans left Earth and followed the Buy-N-Large (BnL) Corporation’s CEO, Shelby Forthright (Fred Willard), onto the Axiom 700 years ago, mobility has been limited and exercise unnecessary. Thus, obesity has run rampant and humans have reverted back to a childlike dependency. Additionally, even though a human (Jeff Garlin) is given the title of “Captain,” the ship is masterminded by a computer system (Sigourney Weaver).

In grabbing Short Circuit, E.T., I Am Legend, I-Robot, 2001: A Space Odyssey, An Inconvenient Truth, and Hello Dolly! (quite literally), writer/director Andrew Stanton compacts his muses and molds them all into a perfect animated cube — not of refuse but of bliss. After penning Toy Story, A Bug’s Life, Toy Story 2, Monsters, Inc., and Finding Nemo and directing A Bug’s Life and Finding Nemo, Stanton has yet again achieved Toy Story/Finding Nemo stature and quite possibly eclipsed the pair. Yes, WALL•E is that good.

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Brandon Valentine is a film critic from Hershey, PA. Aside from possessing the last name “Valentine” and living in “the Sweetest Place on Earth,” Brandon was also born on Valentine’s Day. That’s right, a Valentine born on Valentine’s Day. His “sweet” work can be viewed at Blogcritics, IMDb, and his own site, Valentine on Film.
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Movie Review: WALL•E
Published: July 19, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: SF, Video: Family, Video: Animation, Video: Adventure
Writer: Brandon Valentine
Brandon Valentine's BC Writer page
Brandon Valentine's personal site
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