BOTTOM
LINE:
Pixar
have done it again, producing another fantastic, visually stunning
computer animated film about a trash-compacting robot with a heart
that kids (and adults) will love.
THE
GOOD: Pixar
Animation Studios has built a reputation for establishing the benchmark
of quality for computer animated films; in watching "Wall-E",
it's not hard to see why. Much thought and care and has gone in
to the character design, story and visuals to create an incredible
future world where humans have left Earth because they've turned
it into a garbage dump and only trash compacting robot Wall-E is
left over, dutifully going around doing his job. However, he's been
doing it for so many centuries that he's developed a heart; he's
lonely and yearns for company. His lonely world is changed when
a visiting space ship deposits a probe called Eve on Earth. At first,
Wall-E is frightened, and almost gets blown to pieces by Eve's arm
gun (in a number of amusing scenes, Eve switches from sweet, sleek
probe to gun-toting probe out to destroy in a second). Eventually,
Wall-E convinces Eve he is no threat and starts to show her around
his domain. When Wall-E shows her a plant he found, a series of
events take place where the two end up back at the human space ship
Axiom where the human race has been living for the past seven hundred
years. Now with proof that life can grow on Earth again, the humans
can return to Earth but not before the Axiom's autopilot tries to
stop them in a fairly funny 2001-esque riff. The story is quite
nice and cute, and the amazing thing is that director Andrew Stanton
and his animators successfully convey a 90 minute-long story with
virtually no dialogue. In the first half of the film with the two
robots, everything is conveyed visually, and this is where the strength
of the Pixar animators is on display: the character animation is
first rate (as an example, Eve has a sleek, reflective design and
throughout the film, even the detail of the reflections of her body
is flawlessly rendered), the visuals on the wasteland of Earth are
absolutely stunning (you'd think they were really filmed), and the
sound is perfectly captured in the audio track. Of course, kudos
has to go to the execution of the characters, with Wall-E in particular
conveying a number of quirky character traits. There are also a
number of nice touches as well such as the fact that humans have
turned in to fat, lazy slobs who do not do anything except sit in
hover chairs watching TV all day, allowing the computers to do their
work. Wall-E is another strong film from Pixar which should not
disappoint unless you're not in to this type of thing.
THE
BAD: As
good as this film is, there are a few minor points. Wall-E himself,
although spectacularly realised and designed, bears more than a striking
resemblance to another loveable character, E.T. Wall-E's head, both
in design and movement, is very similar to E.T (albeit faster) and
it might have been nice to try something different. The other minor
point I would make is that the visuals seem more computer-animated
in the second half of the film when Wall-E and Eve show up on the
Axiom. The humans on the ship are computer generated and unfortunately
the film also has some scenes featuring real humans so the basis of
comparison is glaringly obvious, despite the fact that they have an
explanation for the visual design of the humans in the film. Also,
compared to the stunning visuals in the first half, the shots on the
Axiom seem more like a cartoon.
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