**Minor spoilers follow**
Wall-E is one of my favorite Pixar movies. It ties with Up for the number one spot, and I can’t choose between the two. What puts Wall-E up at the top of the list is not just the beautiful animation and the fantastic storytelling (done with almost no dialogue), but Wall-E himself.
Wall-E is one of my favorite Pixar movies. It ties with Up for the number one spot, and I can’t choose between the two. What puts Wall-E up at the top of the list is not just the beautiful animation and the fantastic storytelling (done with almost no dialogue), but Wall-E himself.
I am very fond of my action heroes, and a lot of grey area
characters, and, admittedly, a lot of villains.
Wall-E is none of those. Wall-E
is the sweetest, gentlest, most romantic, naïve, generous, genuine, and most helpful
character ever. He is probably the
nicest fictional character I’ve ever loved.
This is the magic of Wall-E.
Wall-E is one of the most amazingly wonderful characters
ever created. The fact that he doesn’t
really speak, that his character is conveyed strictly through his physical
appearance and actions, just makes the beauty of his character even greater.
The quick synopsis:
It is the future.
Earth has been evacuated and abandoned to mountains of trash and dust
storms, but one lone little robot carries on with the job he was programmed to
do: clean up the trash. Wall-E stands for Waste Allocation Load
Lifter- Earth Class. He’s a little trash
compactor. He trundles around,
compacting trash into neat little cubes and stacking those into towers. One day, a spaceship arrives and drops off a
probe, Eve (Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator), designed to look for
vegetation, and Wall-E’s life is changed forever. He falls in love with Eve (whose name he
can’t pronounce, and he calls her Eva), and he follows her into space, to the
giant starliner Axiom, one of the spaceships that humans have been living on
for the last 700 years.
The first half hour of the movie is my favorite. We follow Wall-E around as he does his job. He may be alone (except for his pet
cockroach), but he finds beauty in everything.
He marvels at a glimpse of the night sky, and films it on his internal
recorder. When he stows away on the
departing spaceship, the first thing he does in space is ooh and ahh over the
view. When he locates where Eve is
stored, the first thing he does is point out at the sky to share that beauty
with her. He takes in all the sights in
space with genuine awe at their beauty.
Wall-E is also a collector.
As he compacts trash on his daily rounds, he collects all manner of
things that appeal to him. His home is
full of his found treasures. His biggest
treasure is a video tape of Hello Dolly, that he watches and re-watches in the
evenings. He has an internal recorder,
and he records the things he loves the most, like the clear night sky, and bits
of Hello Dolly, particularly the part where two characters hold hands to
express their love.
Then Eve arrives.
Where he is terrestrial and boxy and low tech, she is sleek and shiny
and high tech, and she flies and soars with elegant grace. She is beautiful, and Wall-E falls in love
just about instantly.
He follows her around, makes her a statue (and is crushed
when she rejects it), joyfully shows her all the treasures is his home, shows
her his precious Hello Dolly video. He
takes care of her when she shuts down, and, unwilling to lose her, he
desperately follows her into space. All
this is conveyed with almost no dialogue.
Wall-E says Eve’s name, but other than a couple words, he conveys
everything he’s feeling with physicality.
And his heart is worn right on his sleeve. Wall-E is one of the most expressive and
heart felt characters I’ve ever seen.
But as much as I love that first half hour, a lot of the Wall-E’s
true strengths come out in the rest of the movie. Because Wall-E changes every single character
he meets for the better, with the exception of the two bad guys, and for those,
he serves as a catalyst to action. From Eve
to M-O to the door-opener robot who learns to wave a greeting, to the two big Wall-A
load lifters, to the host of damaged robots, to the captain, to John and Mary. Wall-E greets everyone he meets with
warmth and compassion and wide-eyed-optimism and joy. Wall-E cannot even conceive of bad
people. And each one who meets Wall-E discovers
they can break out of their programmed lives and start really living again.
And that is ultimately what this movie is about. It’s about living. Living your own life. Taking control of your own life. Following your dreams with joy and open hearts. Everything on the Axiom is run by
robots. Even the literal paths the
robots are allowed to traverse are designated lines on the floors.
Until Wall-E shows them they don’t have to keep following a line in the
ground. Wall-E doesn’t try to change
anyone. He simply greets everyone with
joy, offers open friendship to all, and points out the beauty and love in the
world. That example is all that’s needed
to open the eyes of those he meets.
Even when Wall-E is grievously damaged, his first reaction
when M-O approaches is to hold out his hand and introduce himself. He doesn’t ask for help, he simply says the
equivalent of hello, happy to meet you.
In the commentary on this film, the director, Andrew
Stanton, says that the theme of the film was that irrational love can conquer
life’s programming. The rest of the story was conceived in service of that theme, and was not meant to be messag-ey in any other way. As a writer, I understand that.
I talked with a lot of people when Wall-E first came out who found negative takeaways in this movie. Some got stuck on objecting to reading in an
environmental message, etc., or they got hung up or offended by depiction of
these futuristic people, but that misses out on the wonder and joy and
happiness of watching a truly nice character change the world in his quest to
find love, happiness, and meaning in life.
This has been an entry for the Robots in Film blogathon. Follow the link to read the other entries in this blogathon. I will also be reviewing the 1971 film Silent Running.
20 comments:
Because I STILL haven't seen this, I didn't read your review. But I'm still here thanking you for joining the blogathon :-)
So true, this is a sweet character and the film has a very positive message. No wonder it was such a phenomenon when it came out a decade ago.
- Chris
I was charmed by your article. It is so true that there is magic in Wall-E.
Glad to find someone else who loves Wall- e as much as I do. It's one of my favorite Pixar movies, as well. He's simply full of love and positivity!
This is one of Pixar's most underrated movies. I was bummed we did not see it on the big screen.
Been meaning to get around to this one. Good review.
Ah, I love WALL-E!! It is in my top five favorite Pixar movies. The last time I watched it I was surprised with how little dialoge there was, but how there was still so much emotion! Good review!
Wall-E is certainly preciousness personified. He is so adorable.
IMO, the futuristic depictions of humans isn't that far from the truth. ;)
I LOVE THIS MOVIE SO MUCH!!!! I love characters who communicate without words, so Wall-E is right up my alley . . . and he's just soooooooooooooooooooo sweet and loving, good gosh. I want to hug him.
Iagree that Wall-E is the cutest - one of my favorite cartoon characters as well. This film deserves to be in the Pixar TOP 5.
Thanks for the kind comment! Cheers!
Thanks for hosting! Looking forward to when you do get to see it. :-D
Seeing it in the theater for the first time, not knowing what it was really about was quite an experiencing. Up was rather similar (though I missed the theatrical release on that one), but I had absolutely no idea where the plot was going to go on that one either. Thanks for stopping by!
There really is. Thanks for reading!
Yes! He is so amazingly positive, it never ceases to amaze me how that outlook can bring out the best in everyone around him. It is an amazing movie.
Agreed about it being underrated. I'm hoping they'll re-release it some day, as I'd like to see it on the big screen again myself.
Hope you enjoy it when you do! Thanks for hosting this with Hamlette! Really enjoyed it and reading all the entries.
Awww! Glad you love it too. It really is a good lesson to observe how much can be communicated without speaking.
Yesssss, I have to agree on that last statement... we seem to be heading that direction.
Yay! Glad to find more people similarly minded about this movie! He is so sweet, in the best connotations of that word.
It does. Thanks for stopping by!
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