lol.Walllll-E!
Agreed. It was quite excellent. Pixar have achieved a new high.This has got to be one of the sweetest and smartest movies I've ever seen.
I'm very much against the Green Crusade of today, and quick to frustrate at its propaganda, but Wall-E really just struck me as old school soft sci-fi. Future doom and gloom of all kinds has been there for decades.I saw this the other day, and although I really enjoyed the first 30 minutes or so, once they got on the spaceship, I was a little turned off. It's not that I don't agree with its message, but for Disney of all companies to try and bring up issues such as consumerism and corporate megastores struck me as extremely hypocritical. I left with a bad taste in my mouth, as well the urge to buy lots of Wall-E toys.
The love story was cute though.
Same here. The end of the world is always nigh. It was not too long ago that a passing comet or eclipse was interpreted to be a sign of a coming apocolypse, and only forty years ago the fear was a coming nuclear war or ice age. The modern apocolypse story is different; we're no longer angering the Gods, blowing the planet to pieces, or facing a devestating ice age; we are instead roasting the planet and stripping it of all that is green and good. The sci-fi writers have taken advantage of all these fears and will continue to do so. In another thirty years I expect (and hope) that few would see any agenda in Wall-E, no more than they reflect seriously upon the stories set in post-apocolyptic wastelands from thirty years before. The trend will pass and people will forget.I'm very much against the Green Crusade of today, and quick to frustrate at its propaganda, but Wall-E really just struck me as old school soft sci-fi. Future doom and gloom of all kinds has been there for decades.
That is an excellent point. Seems a bit self-serving, though I guess we oughtn't be surprised when Disney serves itself.
My 3yo likes to put the Viewmaster on top of his head and call it his WALL-E hat.
Dennis Muren, I understand, did some special effects during the live-action sequences, so I'm guessing that those sequences were milestones in technological innovation.
But I haven't seen the movie. The only Pixar movies I like are Toy Story 1 & 2 and The Incredibles. And The Incredibles would have been infinitely better as a live-action movie.
To be honest, if Wall-E was 100 percent live-action (with special effects, of course), that would boost my chances of seeing it in the theater.