WALL-E
Starring: (voices of) Ben
Burtt, Sigourney Weaver, John Ratzenberger
Directed by: Andrew Stanton (“Finding Nemo”)
Written by: Andrew Stanton (“Monsters Inc.”)
By Kiko
Martinez
Every
time you think Pixar Animations couldn’t possibly top
themselves, they find a way to astonish in the most
creative and heartwarming ways.
While the
animation company hasn’t turned everything it has
touched into gold (there’s a couple of solid bronze
medals in the bunch), there’s no denying they’re leading
the pack in making the most imaginative animated films
since Disney’s days of “Beauty and the Beast” and “The
Lion King.”
In “WALL-E,”
Pixar’s newest venture into the great beyond, we journey
to the 28th century where humans no longer
inhabit the Earth and small robots are left to clean up
the mess that now covers the globe. Over the years,
these small robots known as Waste Allocation Load Lifter
Earth-Class (WALL-E for short) haven’t been maintained
and only one has lasted this long to gather up all the
debris he can during the day. WALL-E goes about his day
working to stack trash into small, neat cubes and spends
the rest of his time exploring in the rubble with his
little cockroach friend and stockpiling treasures he
finds in for her personal collection (think how curious
Ariel was in “The Little Mermaid” when she found
dinglehoppers. That’s how WALL-E becomes when he
discovers something he never knew existed). He becomes
especially intrigued when he uncovers a tiny plant
growing amongst the garbage, so he scoops it up in an
old boot, and adds it to his possessions.
The life he
has always led changes, however, when a spaceship lands
on Earth and a sophisticated robot known as a probe (she
introduces herself to WALL-E as Eve) is sent to the
planet to survey the grounds. Swept off his rusty tracks
by Eve, WALL-E wants nothing more than to be with her
and show her everything he has found while working for
the past 500 years. He also wants to know what it is
like to hold someone’s hand, something he has always
wondered about since he watched a copy of “Hello Dolly”
he found in the landfill.
The
adventure blasts off into space when WALL-E stows away
on Eve’s ship after she find his plant and is programmed
to store it away, go into lock down, and return home.
Her home is on the Axiom, a mothership where a community
of chubby, lazy humans lives and awaits a time when they
can re-colonize Earth once it is habitable.
A beautiful
love story between two robots, “WALL-E” is as charming
as it is a groundbreaking animated feature. Minimalistic
in its delivery of dialogue (before the humans enter the
picture, the most you can expect is a few blips and
bleeps) and awe-inspiring in its technique, it’s the
best animated film of the year. It won’t be surprising
if it stays that way for the second half of the year.
Grade: A-