WALL·E
Published June 7, 2011
Film info
- Title WALL·E
- Director Andrew Stanton
- Year 2008
- Run time 1hr 38m
- Genres Animation, Family, Science Fiction
- Tagline After 700 years of doing what he was built for, he'll discover what he was meant for
700 years after humanity has left Earth, WALL-E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class) fills his days collecting rubbish, and anything else that takes his fancy, trying to fend off the boredom of his lot. But unknowingly, the tiny tube-eyed robot has discovered a secret that could make the once beautiful planet habitable again, enabling humankind to return. One day, Eve, a search robot, lands on Earth in a cloud of dust, and WALL-E is smitten. When she realises the importance of his find, she sets out to tell the remaining humans, eager to let them know the planet can be saved. But WALL-E, after centuries of being alone, can't bear to see her go, and hitches a ride through the cosmos on an adventure his memory banks will never forget.
Live blog
| Time | Comment |
|---|---|
| 2:10 | I like that sequence as a way of showing the Earth’s progression towards disaster. |
| 3:44 | For some reason, I thought this was set on a different planet, but this is Earth. |
| 7:04 | Pesky spork. Do you store it with the spoons or the forks? |
| 8:31 | That’s like the white-outs in Outcasts. A tidal wave of dust. Not fun. |
| 11:35 | The only bit of greenery for miles and he digs it up? Crazy. |
| 15:44 | A spaceship came all that way to drop off a robot? |
| 18:07 | She, it, doesn’t seem very friendly. How will they ever get on? |
| 20:47 | That’s a lot of firepower for a little robot. |
| 23:53 | Bubble wrap! When aliens take over the earth, we can baffle them with bubble wrap. |
| 29:18 | He seems to like her more now she’s all shut up. |
| 32:22 | They do go into space! |
| 36:06 | A sterile environment, eh? How very Apple. |
| 37:23 | The little cleaning robot is awesome. I expect the Roomba to turn into that at some point. |
| 39:54 | I know it’s bad that they’re all fat and stuff, but that space ship does look like fun. |
| 45:36 | That’s an actual human! Weird. |
| 53:06 | The robots have gone rogue! |
| 55:10 | Why does the other robot want rid of the plant? |
| 57:34 | Wall-e’s in lurve. |
| 1:01:49 | Interesting to think of these generations who don’t remember the Earth. |
| 1:12:05 | Mo is definitely my favourite. |
| 1:16:29 | The Axiom is a great idea for a ship. Can someone please invent that? |
| 1:23:40 | Why wouldn’t he remember? She didn’t change his hard drive. |
| 1:25:49 | He hasn’t even noticed he’s back on Earth! |
Thoughts
It definitely wasn’t as mushy as I thought it was going to be, but my expectations were quite low. It was better than anticipated, but I did think the beginning was very slow. Whilst it was fun to see Wall-e interacting with his environment, it’s thirty minutes on the dust and depression of Earth before the fun stuff out in space begins. Overall, I mostly liked it, but I wouldn’t watch it again.
Revisited - Feb 2017
In my memory, I had this film pegged as one of the weaker Pixar outings, but totally watchable | unlike something like Cars 2, or Up (which I haven’t even attempted). Watching it with a more open attitude to emotions made it slightly better, and I didn’t think it drifted too much at the start | embedding Wall-e in his lonely environment made perfect sense, and I could almost feel the solitude.
Still, even after all this time, the cleaning robot is my favourite.
Rating: 3 / 5