Wall-E by Pixar: A Review

2008-06-29 01:50:07 (GMT) (Caymanmama.com - Entertainment News)



Dallas, Texas (CaymanMama.com) — CNN reported that during the past decade, Pixar, one of the most unswerving movie production unit, has become an epitome for quality, digital animation, character depth, slapstick, comedy and engrossing story-telling which appeals to kids as well as adults. Andrew Stanton has directed and written the ‘Wall-E’ that has become the most ambitious and classic movie of Pixar.
Wall-E is a garbage drone power by solar energy and is the only remaining operating one on a toxic and abandoned planet. By compressing junk to form building blocks and piling them into towers which are shadows of skyscrapers of ruins wastes of an unknown city. Having created pollution on the planet even more than it can handle, the globo-corporation evacuates the customers for a 5-year cruise to space and leaves the robots on the earth to clean it up. The calculations are off and even after 7 centuries, Wall-E continues to work. He collects unusual items like whisk, bubble wrap, electric bulb and a ‘Hello Dolly’ VHS tape which is his most cherished item. His systems scramble when he bangs into Eve which is a glossy research pod whose egg-like sleek design attracts him and he starts following her even into the outer space. Robots have been humanized in other movies like A.I., Metropolis and Blade Runner and they have also shown that humans are becoming more and more mechanistic themselves.

The most obvious touchstones of Stanton include ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ by Stanley Kubrick in 1968 and ‘Silent Running’ by Douglas Trumbull in 1972, but in this movie, the animation spirit goes back to Charlie Chaplin’s delightful improvisatory dexterity and sentimental reveries. The little robot, Wall-E, seeks companionship in anything that he gets, a cockroach, a movie or a search robot. Wall-E has a combination of beauty, grace, laughter, love and joy, which is wonderful for just any movie.



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