"You can't make somebody understand something if their salary depends upon them not understanding it." - Upton Sinclair

Friday, July 4, 2008

Movie review: Wall-E


Directed by Andrew Stanton

Pixar has been consistently putting out good movies ever since it starting releasing feature length films. At the very least, they tell good stories that balance out enough its storytelling to appeal to young and old alike. For me, while I've always thought Pixar was a cut above the rest, there are always some parts of Pixar films that make me go "Oh, that's cute but kinda silly." I didn't get into Cars, and even with Ratatouille, it bordered on the silly for me. That's why it's such a pleasure to say that Wall-E has exceeded all my expectations, and then some.

Wall-E is a movie the overflows with beauty; and not only in the visual sense, but on every level. It tells the story of a lonely garbage compacting robot who was left to clean up the mess that was left by humankind. His only companion is a cockroach and his endless sense of curiosity. Eventually, he runs into Eve, a robot probe that was sent out to discover whether Earth has become livable again. This has been Wall-E's only contact with "life" and, with boundless love, he pursues it to the ends of the galaxy.

It's amazing that the first half of the movie has almost no dialogue in it. At times it feels like you are watching something like Fantasia, where visual and music in combined to tell a compelling story.

It is also Pixar's most political movie to date. For the most part, there isn't a whole lot of commentary in the other Pixar films. They usually comment on small stuff like family relations, friendships, and so on. But Wall-E comments on the grand scale, and serves as a warning on pollution and environmental destruction gone uncontrolled. Moreover, it is a remark on human apathy, and how we can take control and make a difference. Knowing that Al Gore is on the Board of Directors at Apple, I'm surprised I didn't see Al Gore make an appearance. There are even elements of Huxley's Brave New World in it, to say that if we take a moment to snap out of it and see the world for what it is, we can truly feels its beauty.

Wall-E also takes a jab at corporatism, which is ironic considering that it's being distributed by Disney, which rivals McDonald's as the symbol of corporate conformism. I wonder how many pick up on that.

I have a feeling that Wall-E's impact would be significant. As I felt walking out of the theater, I felt as if I've watched something historical. Maybe it'll just be the first animated film to win Best Picture at the Oscars, or maybe because this will get some people thinking more deeply about the environment, about human rights, and about the future.

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