Pixar genius reigns in this funny romantic comedy, which stars a robot who says absolutely nothing for a full 25 minutes yet somehow completely transfixes and endears himself to the audience within the first few minutes of the film. As the last robot left on earth, Wall-E (voiced by Ben Burtt) is one small robot--with a big, big heart--who holds the future of earth and mankind squarely in the palm of his metal hand. He's outlasted all the "Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class" robots that were assigned some 700 years ago to clean up the environmental mess that man made of earth while man vacationed aboard the luxury spaceship Axiom. Wall-E has dutifully gone about his job compacting trash, the extreme solitude broken only by his pet cockroach, but he's developed some oddly human habits and ideas. When the Axiom sends its regularly scheduled robotic EVE probe (Elissa Knight) to earth, Wall-E is instantly smitten and proceeds to try to impress EVE with his collection of human memorabilia. EVE's directive compels her to bring Wall-E's newly collected plant sprout to the captain of the Axiom and Wall-E follows in hot pursuit. Suddenly, the human world is turned upside down and the Captain (Jeff Garlin) joins forces with Wall-E and a cast of other misfit robots to lead the now lethargic people back home to earth. Wall-E is a great family film with the most impressive aspect being the depth of emotion conveyed by a simple robot--a machine typically considered devoid of emotion, but made so absolutely touching by the magic of Pixar animation. Also well-worth admiring are the sweeping views from space, the creative yet disturbing vision of what strange luxuries a future space vacation might offer, and the innovative use of trash in a future cityscape. Underneath the slapstick comedy and touching love story is a poignant message about the folly of human greed and its potential effects on earth and the entire human race. Wall-E is preceded in theaters by the comical short Presto in which a magician's rabbit, unfed one too many times takes his revenge against the egotistical magician. (Ages 3 and older) --Tami Horiuchi>
Stills from Wall-E (Click for larger image)
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Ben Burtt | WALL·E |
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Elissa Knight | EVE |
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Jeff Garlin | Captain |
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Fred Willard | Shelby Forthright - BNL CEO |
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Digital Performer (Various) | Self - AUTO |
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John Ratzenberger | John |
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Kathy Najimy | Mary |
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Sigourney Weaver | Ship's Computer |
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Elynn Alonzo | Mom |
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Kim Kopf | Hoverchair Mother |
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Niki McElroy | Pool Mother |
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Garrett Palmer | Blond Boy in Commercial |
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Lori Richardson | PR-T |
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Jessica Skelton | Young Girlfriend |
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Kai Steel Smith | Brunette Boy in Commercial |
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Michael Toy | Commercial Human |
| Director | Andrew Stanton |
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| Writer | Andrew Stanton, Jim Reardon, Peter Docter | |
| Producer | Lindsey Collins, John Lasseter, Gillian Libbert, Chris Montan, Jim Morris, Thomas Porter | |
| Musician | Thomas Newman | |
| Photography | Martin Rosenberg | |
| Edition | Three-Disc Special Edition + Digital Copy and BD Live |
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| Packaging | HD Case |
| Nr Discs | 3 |
| Screen Ratios | 2.40:1 |
| Audio Tracks | ENGLISH: DTS HD 5.1 |
| Subtitles | English |
| Distributor | Walt Disney Video |
| Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
| Edition Release Date | Nov 18, 2008 |
| Regions | Region |
| Purchased | For $ 40.99 |
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| Index | 2250 |
| Added Date | Dec 12, 2012 01:15:29 |
| Modified Date | Sep 25, 2019 23:29:16 |