Film and TV
Wall-E
THE technical wizards at Pixar
( Toy Story, Finding Nemo, The
Incredibles ) dispel the myth
that size matters in their latest
computer animated fable.
As long as you've got a big
heart, anything is possible, and
in WALL-E , that just happens
to be the most
magical, out of
this world love
story, distinguished by amazingly
detailed visuals.
Director Andrew Stanton has
created a masterpiece that
tugs the heartstrings and
leaves us giddy
with
joy.
As
soon
as this
beguiling
film ends,
you'll be clamouring
to watch it
again.
Pixar releases begin with an
enchanting short and WALL-E
is no different, whetting our
appetites with the hysterical
battle of wits between turn-ofthe-
century magician Presto
DiGiotagione and his cute
stage bunny, Alec Azam.
Presto receives a deserved
standing ovation from his audience,
signalling the start of the
main feature, set on a futuristic
planet Earth ravaged by pollution.
The human race has evacuated
this graveyard of detritus
and scrap metal aboard giant
cruiser spaceships, leaving
behind an army of solar-powered
droids to clean up the
mess.
Click here to watch the trailer
The last of these mechanised
creations, WALL-E
(Waste Allocation Load
Lifter Earth-Class), dutifully
crushes
all of the
refuse into
neat
blocks,
collecting
any interesting artefacts of 20th century
life (Rubik's Cube, fire extinguisher,
bubble wrap) to add to
his personal collection.
A chirpy cockroach is WALLE's
only companion and these
unlikely friends often sit down
at night to view a worn out
video cassette of Hello, Dolly !,
which fires the little robot's
hopelessly romantic hard drive.
Out of the blue, a mysterious
mother ship touches down on
the planet surface and spits out
a sleek search-bot called EVE
(Extra-terrestrial Vegetation
Evaluator), who has been programmed
to seek out flora on
the third rock from the sun.
What she discovers, however,
is an out-dated Load Lifter with
a lust for life and a thirst for
adventure.
From the opening shots of
satellite-encircled Earth and its
dead continents of precariously
stacked rubbish, WALL-E is a
feast for the senses, conjuring
unforgettable images like the
diminutive hero gliding through
the rings of Saturn or the
robots' deep space waltz.
Every frame is crafted with
love and with such jaw-dropping
attention to detail.
The eponymous hero is utterly
adorable and the romance
with EVE gathers pace gently
before a masterful denouement
that will reduce grown men to
tears. Sound designer Ben
Burtt allows WALL-E to communicate
through a language of
beeps and burps.
Not since Short Circuit's
Number 5 has a robot seemed
so human.
Kids will love the army of malfunctioning
droids introduced in
the second half of the film
including the compulsiveobsessive
M-O (Microbe
Obliterator), who is run ragged
trying to clean up foreign contaminants
that fall off WALL-E's
rusty caterpillar tracks.
Stanton's futuristic film shoots
for the moon and exceeds the
hype.
You're unlikely to see a better
picture this year.
11:32am Friday 18th July 2008
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