WALL-E is more clever than a spork |
It’s not often that we see 98% movie review scores from the Rotten Tomatoes collective. WALL-E is getting lots of reviewer love.

This morning skeptical, but curious, I told our recently graduated son who has been working with me in our online business: “Hey, you want to go see this really quick?” At first he wasn’t that interested, but then he read some of the reviews and changed his mind.
The single line synopsis of this movie is irresistible:
What if mankind had to leave Earth, and somebody forgot to turn the last robot off?
Off to the 10:45am PST showing we went, intrigued.
There was a deaf person with her family in front of us buying tickets who were having some animated sign language about the movie. We ended up sitting behind the family during the movie. About 30 minutes into the movie I realized just how great a movie this is for the hearing impaired. How many movies are made that don’t need subtitles?
The first 40 minutes of the movie have almost no dialogue and the final hour have very little dialogue. WALL-E is one of those extremely rare films that don’t need much in the way of dialogue or subtitles and yet can not only sustain interest but entertain. While we’re on the “how many movies …” kick, how many movies can get laughs out of sporks?
Sporks!
WALL-E is Pixar’s latest compelling animated tale. A science fiction love story about a final remaining trash compactor named WALL-E operating on a trash-ridden future version of earth somewhere around the year 2800. Where did all the people go? And what happened to humanity? WALL-E offers a bleak, and somewhat believable premonition of mankind 800+ years from now. Without spoiling the movie, I’ll just say we haven’t become the most sedentiary beings. You’d think mankind would learn not to leave too much control to robots. This is a well-trodden path many science fiction writers have been writing about and warning us against for the last 75+ years.
The only company WALL-E has on earth is a cockroach (who doesn’t speak thankfully) until a probe droid named Eve (”Eva”) is sent back to earth. WALL-E who spends his time making cubes out of garbage and picking out the good stuff like old VHS tapes (what, no DVD?), watching movies through an old iPod, and popping bubble wrap, takes an immediate liking to Eva to stave off his loneliness.
Can’t say I ever imagined liking a romantic story involving a trash compacter but WALL-E fires on all cylinders. This is the best animated movie I’ve seen in a long time. No animated movies come to mind to compare it to, which is a high compliment. I’ve written hundreds of reviews and never given an A+ to anything. I have no problem giving WALL-E the first A+. It’s that good. It’s family friendly too. The 98% Rotten Tomatoes reviewers are giving it is well-deserved. My son gave it a B-, but his only other favorite animated movie was Toy Story. WALL-E is better than Toy Story. Get out of the heat and into the air conditioning. Take your loved ones to see this film. Grade: A+.
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Thanks TDavid! The Wife and youngest really want to see it? The oldest and myself weren’t that interested… Looks like a family outing is in the offing!
Comment by FranciscoIV — June 27, 2008 @ 8:27 pm PST
I have young kids, so I’ll see WALL-E. It’s certainly not at the top of my list, but it looks like fun nonetheless. I love your observation about being great for the deaf. It also makes it easier to translate. And when the lady asks if we want tickets for the English screening or the French screening, we’ll just smile.
Comment by David Leonhardt — June 29, 2008 @ 6:59 pm PST
FranciscoIV did you see it yet? If/when so, let me know what you thought.
David, WALL-E pulled in 62 million over the weekend and was #1. Something tells me unless something really good comes out next weekend, it will be #1 again. Will be curious to hear what you think as well.
Comment by TDavid — June 30, 2008 @ 6:46 am PST
Wall-E is pretty charming despite it’s different approach. I like it’s simple, lighthearted story and its’ definitely refreshing to watch a movie like this!
Comment by MykeC — June 30, 2008 @ 5:55 pm PST
I had no desire to see this movie, but I’m intrigued now. I think my mom wants to take my son to see it, but I’ll definitely pick it up for us to watch again on DVD.
Comment by UptakeInOH — July 2, 2008 @ 4:42 pm PST
I went to see it with the family last weekend.
It’s fairly well done, and I appreciated it, but I think the inherent limitations in not being able to do much dialogue made it less-than-exciting for me. And the main plot is pretty unimaginative - yes, they’re robots, but it’s a very plain boy-meets-girl story. The storyline with the captain is nice, and perhaps more interesting than the main storyline.
I also think they missed a few obvious things - why doesn’t wall-e have any “in” with the wall-m robots? Why don’t other rogue robots have a bigger part?
To pick an animated movie that I think is better one must look no further than “The Incredibles”.
Comment by Eric — July 2, 2008 @ 4:45 pm PST
I’ve read that there were comparisons of Wall-E to Idiocracy by Mike Judge. I rented Idiocracy last night and didn’t think it was close enough to even be called inspiration for Wall-E. Firstly, not every human in Idiocracy is fat. Second I saw Idiocracy borrowing more from Running Man than Wall-E borrowing from it.
Another criticism: Wall-E looks something like Short Circuit. This one is true when you see pictures side by side. How many different designs for robots are there? Eva looks a little like R2D2, big deal.
Eric - I think 800 years later the Wall-M robots would be programmed like the new Terminator robots, yes? They wouldn’t get along either. I didn’t care that much for The Incredibles.
Comment by TDavid — July 3, 2008 @ 8:27 am PST