WALL-E
WALL-E | |
---|---|
File:WALL-Eposter.jpg | |
Directed by | Andrew Stanton |
Written by | Screenplay: Andrew Stanton Jim Reardon Story: Andrew Stanton Pete Docter |
Produced by | Jim Morris |
Starring | Ben Burtt Elissa Knight Sigourney Weaver Jeff Garlin Fred Willard John Ratzenberger Kathy Najimy |
Edited by | Stephen Schaffer |
Music by | Thomas Newman Peter Gabriel (song) |
Distributed by | Walt Disney Pictures |
Release dates | June 27, 2008 (USA) July 18, 2008 (UK) September 18, 2008 (AUS), (NZ) |
Running time | 98 min.[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $180,000,000[2] |
Box office | $482.5 million (worldwide)[3] |
WALL-E (promoted with an interpunct as WALL·E) is a 2008 computer-animated-science fiction-romance film produced by Pixar Animation Studios. The film was directed by Andrew Stanton. It follows the story of a robot named WALL-E who is designed to clean up a polluted Earth. He eventually falls in love with another robot named EVE, and follows her into outer space on an adventure.
After directing Finding Nemo, Stanton felt Pixar had created believable simulations of underwater physics and was willing to direct a film set in space. Most of the characters do not have actual human voices, but instead communicate with body language and robotic sounds, designed by Ben Burtt, that resemble voices. In addition, it is the first animated feature by Pixar to have segments featuring live action characters.
Walt Disney Pictures released it in the United States and Canada on June 27, 2008. The film grossed $23.1 million on its opening day, and $63 million during its opening weekend in 3,992 theaters, ranking #1 at the box office. This ranks the third highest-grossing opening weekend for a Pixar film as of July 2008. Following Pixar tradition, WALL-E was paired with a short film for its theatrical release, with WALL-E's short being Presto. WALL-E has achieved highly positive reviews with an approval rating of 96% on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.
Plot
In the early 22nd century, the megacorporation "Buy n Large" assumed every economic service on Earth, including the government. Overrun by un-recycled waste, the planet became so polluted that it could no longer support life. Buy n Large CEO Shelby Forthright (Fred Willard) developed a plan that would have all humans spend the next five years aboard fully-automated luxury starliners, while an army of "WALL-E" robots would compact the waste into skyscraper-like towers for easy disposal. However, the plan largely failed, and thus Forthright had the starliners stay their courses until Earth was made habitable again. For the next 700 years humanity continued to live aboard the starliners for many generations, with the micro-gravity causing a loss of bone mass leading to humans becoming too obese to do anything without the help of robotic assistance; even piloting the ships is handled by their individual computerized autopilots. On Earth, all of the WALL-E units have failed except for one; this remaining unit still performs his duties but, after centuries of prolonged activation, has achieved a form of sentience, collecting interesting knickknacks, befriending a cockroach, and watching an old videotape of Hello, Dolly! to learn about human emotions including love.
One day, WALL-E (Ben Burtt) finds a new plant growth in the trash, and places it in an old shoe for safekeeping. Later, a spaceship lands on Earth and deploys a state-of-the-art "EVE" probe (Elissa Knight) which begins to scan the soil as part of her directive to find plant life on Earth. While WALL-E falls in love with the new robot on first sight, EVE is much more concerned with fulfilling her mission, though she eventually warms up to WALL-E and takes to his unique personality. When WALL-E shows her the plant he found, EVE's automatic programming initiates, causing her to seize the plant and store it inside of herself, activate a homing beacon for her ship, and shut down. WALL-E is unable to awaken EVE, but goes to great lengths to protect her from the elements, as well as take her motionless body out on dates. EVE's spaceship later returns to collect her; WALL-E, unwilling to leave EVE, hitches onto the ship's hull to follow EVE to her destination, the Axiom, the flagship of the human starliners.
WALL-E realizes that EVE is part of the Axiom's programming to determine if the Earth is capable of supporting life; when the plant sample EVE carries is positively identified in the ship's holo-detector, the ship will return to Earth with its hyperjump engines, allowing humans to recolonize the planet. However, the ship's autopilot "Auto" (MacInTalk) had received a final directive from Forthright those hundreds of years ago, incorrectly asserting that Earth had become too toxic to ever support life, and told the autopilots to stay the course in space. Auto takes measures to stop the plant from being delivered to the holo-detector by attempting to destroy it, having one of the robots under his control secretly steal the plant from EVE while she is deactivated. When EVE reactivates, discovers WALL-E and finds the plant is missing, she thinks WALL-E took and lost the plant and becomes disillusioned with him, and is sent to the robot repair ward where WALL-E's clumsy antics get her into trouble. When she tries to send him back to Earth on an escape pod, they both witness the true thief deposit the plant into the pod and setting it to self-destruct. WALL-E safely retrieves the plant for EVE who, out of gratitude, kisses him and shares a dance with him in space around the ship.
WALL-E and EVE try to return the plant to the ship's Captain (Jeff Garlin), but Auto prevents them from bringing the plant to the holo-detector. The Captain understands that the plant is living proof that life is again sustainable on Earth, as well as a sign that they have to return to Earth to make amends, but Auto does not and drops WALL-E and EVE down a garbage chute into the Axiom's waste chambers. WALL-E is significantly damaged, and the only parts that can save him are those he kept on Earth. EVE, having realized her true feelings for WALL-E after observing through her own security recordings how he protected her while she was dormant, determines that the only way to return to Earth in time is to get the plant into the holo-detector and initiate the hyperjump. With the help of the humans and other robots, the two attempt to get the plant into the holo-detector, but are continually thwarted by Auto's control of the ship and security systems. The Captain manages to stand up on his own and deactivates Auto, allowing the plant to be placed in the holo-detector and sending the Axiom back to Earth, though WALL-E is damaged to an even greater extent in the process.
After the Axiom lands on Earth, EVE frantically attempts to repair WALL-E. Though she is able to restore his body, his memories and personality seem to have been erased, his waste-disposal programming taking over. EVE is heartbroken and mournfully gives WALL-E a farewell kiss, resulting in an electrical spark between their faces that reboots WALL-E's memory. The two robots embrace happily as the humans from the Axiom take their first steps on Earth, carefully replanting the seedling that brought them back and begin working alongside the robots to restore their home.
Cast
Ben Burtt is the sound engineer for WALL-E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-class), the titular character of the film, as well as other robot characters. WALL-E is a mobile trash compactor, the last operational unit in a massive line created by the Buy n Large Corporation to gather and compact the waste created by the humans that used their products. WALL-E is solar-powered and constantly replaces his worn parts with those scavenged from non-functional WALL-E units. He can retract his limbs and head into his body and form a cube when he senses danger (although he is armed with a laser beam between his eyes, he uses this chiefly as a cutting tool with which to manipulate waste). He may also fold into a cube when he is resting. WALL-E's long and lonely existence has granted him sentience and emotion. His loneliness is soon requited via EVE, a probe that comes to Earth searching for signs of plant life.
Burtt also produced the voice for M-O (Microbe Obliterator), one of the maintenance robots who cleans the filth in the ship and inspects incoming shipments for foreign contaminants. M-O is annoyed by the amount of filth on WALL-E, and learns to act on his own accord by following WALL-E in an attempt to clean him; his trek eventually leads him to save WALL-E and EVE from certain doom in the waste disposal chamber of the Axiom and befriends them. M-O's warning message and catchphrase, "foreign contaminant", were created using PlainTalk, while the chime produced by WALL-E to signify his recharge is identical to the chime produced by a Macintosh computer upon activation, signifying the successful completion of the power-on self-test (POST).[4]
Elissa Knight as EVE (Extra-terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator), a sleek, ergonomically advanced robotic probe whose main function is to locate plant life in order to determine whether the Earth is capable of supporting human life. She is equipped with scanners and a retractable plasma cannon in her right arm, the latter of which she is quick to use at the slightest provocation. Although initially EVE appears to be an unfeeling, stoic robot concerned with nothing more than what she is programmed to do, she does display basic emotions early on in the film. As she spends more time with WALL-E throughout the film, she learns to convey her emotions even more, eventually leading her to put others, namely WALL-E, before her programming. Her design was inspired by the sleek white versions of Apple, Inc. products such as the iPod [5].
Jeff Garlin as the Captain, the sole leader and commander of the Axiom, who becomes enraptured by the images of Earth as it was before the rise of Buy n Large and therefore assumes dynamism and a leader's position among the humans who recolonize Earth. His holographic commemoration in his room reveals his name to be "B. McCrea" (his given name is unknown).
Fred Willard as Shelby Forthright, CEO of the Buy n Large Corporation. In the film, a global cleanup project is initiated by Shelby Forthright as humanity is evacuated into space; the project goes awry when he finds he had underestimated just how toxic the Earth has become, persuading him to forsake hope. Fred Willard is the only cast member in this film who plays a live-action character with a speaking role, and the first to do so in any Pixar film.
John Ratzenberger as John, a human who is made aware of his surroundings by WALL-E. He becomes the companion of Mary.
Kathy Najimy as Mary, another human made aware of her surroundings by WALL-E. She becomes the companion of John.
Sigourney Weaver as the Axiom's computer. Weaver's casting was a nod to the Alien films[6].
MacInTalk sounds were used for Auto, the Axiom's internal autopilot, built into the ship's steering wheel. Burtt originally wanted to use maritime military sounds for the character.[7] Auto has a single, HAL-like eye. He serves as the antagonist of the film. His responsibilities include following Directive A113, by which to ensure that the ship never returns to Earth. Upon discovering a small plant retrieved by EVE, Auto seeks to dispose of it in order to follow the A113 protocol, thus maintaining the status quo.
Other robots
- BRL-A - Mobile umbrella robots, one of which has trouble keeping itself closed.
- BUF-R - Cleaning robots that polish the EVE probes.
- BURN-E - Robots that weld and make repairs on the Axiom.
- COM-T - Secretary robots that type and organize files, one of which learns how to wave hands from WALL-E.
- D-FIB - Defibrillator robots, one of which cannot control the voltage in its paddles.
- GEL-A - Robot stewards that oversee security on the ship, primarily following commands from Auto.
- GO-4 - Head of security and the Captain's second-in-command, but which is entirely subservient to Auto.
- HAN-S - Robotic masseurs, one of which is overly energetic with little control over its flailing arms.
- L-T - Flashlight robots, one of which likes to play in the dark.
- NAN-E - Nanny robots that teach and watch over the children on the Axiom.
- PR-T - Beautician robots that make mindless small-talk, one of which tries to give a garish makeover to anything nearby.
- REM-E - Robotic rodents, modeled after computer mice, that inhabit the Axiom.
- SERV-A - Service tram robots that carry other robots and items from place to place.
- SPR-A - Cleaning robots that spray and rinse robots with water.
- VAQ-M - Vacuum cleaner-like robots, one of which is prone to sneezing fits.
- VN-GO - Painting robots, one of which tracks paint wherever it goes.
- WALL-A - (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Axiom-Class). Large trash-compactor robots used aboard the Axiom.
Production
WALL-E is the only one still truly living. And what is the ultimate purpose of living? To love. And WALL-E falls head over heels with a robot named EVE. Now, WALL-E's feelings aren't reciprocated because, well, she has no feelings. She's a robot, cold and clinical. WALL-E is the one who has evolved over time and garnered feelings. So in the end, it's gonna be WALL-E's pursuit to win EVE's heart, and his unique appreciation of life to become mankind's last hope to rediscover its roots. In short, it's going to take a robot's love to help make the world go round.
Andrew Stanton conceived WALL-E before Toy Story was made:[8] the idea was, "What if mankind evacuated Earth and forgot to turn off the last remaining robot?"[9] Pete Docter developed the film for two months in 1995, after Stanton explained the story to him, but he decided to make Monsters, Inc. (2001) instead, as he was unsure of telling a love story.[10] The idea continued to preoccupy Stanton, because of his love of space opera and personifying inanimate objects.[7]
After directing Finding Nemo, Stanton felt they "had really achieved the physics of believing you were really under water, so I said 'Hey, let’s do that with air'. Let’s fix our lenses, let’s get the depth of field looking exactly how anamorphic lenses work and do all these tricks that make us have the same kind of dimensionality that we got on Nemo with an object out in the air and on the ground'".[8] Producer Jim Morris added that the film was animated so that it would feel "as if there really was a cameraman".[11] Dennis Muren was hired to advise Pixar on replicating science fiction films from the 1960s and 1970s, including elements such as 70 mm frames, barrel distortion and lens flare.[4][12] Scale models were made for Muren, which he used to teach Pixar.[13]
Life is nothing but imperfection and the computer likes perfection, so we spent probably 90% of our time putting in all of the imperfections, whether it's in the design of something or just the unconscious stuff. How the camera lens works in [a real] housing is never perfect, and we tried to put those imperfections [into the virtual camera] so that everything looks like you're in familiar [live-action] territory.
The design of the robots came about by Stanton telling his designers, "See it as an appliance first, and then read character into it".[8] In creating the title character, the animators were inspired by a pair of binoculars and by Luxo Jr., the lamp featured in the Pixar logo.[7] Stanton was playing with a pair of binoculars, which looked happy or sad depending on whether they were upside down or not.[4] Stanton felt "you don't need a mouth, you don't need a nose, you get a whole personality just from [the eyes]", which meant the audience would feel he is "not just a human in a robot shell". WALL-E's body came from the logic of having his head, arms, and legs pull into his body like a turtle and tank treads that would allow him to overcome any terrain. The director also acknowledged he may have been subconsciously influenced by Johnny 5 from the film Short Circuit, which he once saw.[12]
Stanton pitched the story to Ben Burtt who signed on to do the sound design.[7] There is little traditional dialogue in the film; Stanton joked, "I’m basically making R2-D2: The Movie", in reference to Burtt's work on Star Wars. To create dialogue, Burtt took various mechanical sounds, and combined them to resemble speech.[9] When WALL-E recharges his battery by means of solar energy, he makes the same startup chime as does a Macintosh computer [15]. Executive producer John Lasseter said of the film's lack of dialogue that "the art of animation is about what the character does, not what it says. It all depends on how you tell the story, whether it has a lot of dialogue or not."[16]
WALL-E was dedicated to Justin Wright (1981–2008), a Pixar animator who had worked on Ratatouille and died of a heart attack before WALL-E's release.[17]
As of July 2008, WALL-E holds the record for the highest production budget of any Pixar film at $180 million.[citation needed]
Soundtrack
Thomas Newman previously composed Stanton's Finding Nemo. The songs "Put on your Sunday clothes" and "It only takes a moment" from Hello Dolly! were used because they inspired the symbolism of WALL-E wanting to hold hands with EVE. Stanton came across the former song first as he found the idea of using it in a science fiction film unconventional. Coincidentally, Newman's uncle Lionel Newman worked on that film.[18] Composing began in 2005. EVE's theme was arranged for the first time in October 2007, and originally used more orchestral elements. Newman was encouraged to make it sound more feminine.[19] Newman travelled to London to compose the song "Down to Earth" with Peter Gabriel, who is one of Stanton's favorite musicians. Afterwards, Newman rescored some of the film to include the song's composition, so it would not sound intrusive when played during the film's end.[18]
Release
Continuing a Pixar tradition, WALL-E was paired with a short film for its theatrical release. The attached film was Presto.[20] This is the first Disney-Pixar film to use the new Walt Disney Pictures logo (used in 2006 since Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest), since the previous eight films (Toy Story-Ratatouille) used the Pixar version of the logo.
Box office
The film premiered at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on June 23, 2008.[21] WALL-E opened in wide release in the United States and Canada on June 27, 2008 and grossed $23.1 million in its opening day.[22] In its opening weekend, the film grossed $63 million in 3,992 theaters, ranking #1 at the box office.[23] The opening weekend would give the film the third-best opening weekend for a Pixar film.[24] As of November 2008, the movie has made $222,794,553 domestically and $259,749,469 internationally, giving it a total worldwide gross of $482,544,022.[3]
Reception
WALL-E received near-universal acclaim from film critics.[25] Rotten Tomatoes reported that 97% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based upon a sample of 200 reviews, with an average rating of 8.6/10.[26] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film has received an average score of 93, based on 39 reviews.[25] As of November 2008, it is the second highest rated film of 2008.
Todd McCarthy of Variety called the film "Pixar's ninth consecutive wonder", saying it was imaginative yet straightforward. Citing WALL-E's "adroit" borrowing from other works, McCarthy said it pushed the boundaries of animation in managing to balance esoteric ideas with more immediately accessible ones, and that the main difference between the film and other science fiction projects rooted in an apocalypse was its optimism. McCarthy also had praise for Thomas Newman's musical score and the visuals, for which he cited cinematographer Roger Deakins' input as a visual consultant as a possible factor.[27]
Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter declared that WALL-E surpassed the achievements of Pixar's previous eight features, saying that the film had the "heart, soul, spirit and romance" of the best silent films. He said that the filmmakers managed to tell a terrific story through visual and aural ideas which enabled the robotic characters to convey "a rainbow of emotions". He said the visuals were arguably Pixar's best and praised the creation of a ruined Earth city and a human spaceship as "fantastically imaginative". Honeycutt said the film's definitive stroke of brilliance was in using a mix of archive film footage and computer graphics to trigger WALL-E's romantic leanings. He praised Burtt's sound design, saying "If there is such a thing as an aural sleight of hand, this is it". Honeycutt concluded by saying that despite the film's acknowledged nods to other works (2001: A Space Odyssey, and moments where robots "run riot" bringing to mind Monsters, Inc.), WALL-E could be Pixar's most original work to date.[28]
Roger Ebert writing in the Chicago Sun-Times said WALL-E succeeded in three areas: as "an enthralling animated film, a visual wonderment, and a decent science-fiction story". Ebert said the scarcity of dialogue would allow it to "cross language barriers" in a manner appropriate to the global theme, and he had praise for the visual effects, saying the color palette was "bright and cheerful... and a little bit realistic". He cited early Disney animations that successfully translated human expressions onto non-human characters as an influence on the title character. He said the film managed to generate a "curious" regard for the WALL-E, comparing his design ("rusty and hard-working and plucky") favorably to more obvious attempts at creating "lovable" lead characters. Ebert called the storytelling "enchanting" and said the film could be enjoyed by adults and children alike. He said WALL-E was concerned with ideas rather than spectacle, saying it may require "a little thought" on the part of the audience, and that this could be particularly stimulating to younger viewers.[29]
Commentary
The film was interpreted as tackling a topical, ecologically-minded agenda.[26][27][28] Todd McCarthy said it did so with a lightness of touch that granted the viewer the ability to accept or ignore the message.[27] Jessica Jensen, blogging at The Huffington Post, while praising the film overall, felt it did not make enough of a point with its environmental themes. She suggested it should have had environmental advice or a website link during the end credits, adding it was "troubling" that by the end "humans return to Earth and it seems as if everything will just be hunky-dory".[30] The film's ecological theme was criticized by conservative commentators such as CNN Headline News host Glenn Beck, and contributors for National Review Online;[31] Shannen W. Coffin said that the film was "leftist propaganda about the evils of mankind",[32] and Jonah Goldberg wrote that he agreed with the charges of hypocrisy and "Malthusian fear mongering" leveled at the film by others, but said that it was "fascinating" and occasionally "brilliant".[33]
Patrick J. Ford of The American Conservative said WALL-E's conservative critics were missing lessons in the film that he felt were appealing to traditional conservatism. He argued that the mass consumerism in the film was not shown to be a product of big business, but of too close a tie between big business and big government: "The government unilaterally provided its citizens with everything they needed, and this lack of variety led to Earth’s downfall". Responding to Coffin's claim that the film points out the "evils of mankind", he argued the only evils depicted were those that resulted from "losing touch with our own humanity" and that fundamental conservative representations such as the farm, the family unit, and "wholesome" entertainment were in the end held aloft by the human characters. He concluded, "By steering conservative families away from WALL-E, these commentators are doing their readers a great disservice".[34]
Andrew Stanton commented on the reaction to the film by denying any specific agenda beyond telling the story about 'the last robot on Earth'.[35][36] He said that people were making connections that he "never saw coming", and that the circumstances of humanity's abandoning the Earth arose merely as a way of telling the story, "reverse-engineered" from the initial concept of using refuse as both a visual shorthand that would be easy for children to understand, and as a way of depicting the title character as holding a low-status, menial job.[37]
Kyle Smith, author and columnist for the New York Post, wrote that in depicting humans of the future as "a flabby mass of peabrained idiots who are literally too fat to walk", WALL-E was darker and more cynical than any major Disney feature film he could recall. He compared the humans in the film to the patrons of Disney World, adding, "I'm also not sure I've ever seen a major corporation spend so much money to issue an insult to its customers".[38] Maura Judkis of U.S. News & World Report questioned whether this depiction of "frighteningly obese humans" would resonate with children, making them more likely to "play outside rather than in front of the computer, to avoid a similar fate".[39] Stanton denied that his intention was to pass comment on obesity, saying the purpose was instead to portray human overdependency.[37]
Award wins and nominations
- World Soundtrack Awards 2008: Best Original Score of the Year, Thomas Newman[40]
- 2008 Teen Choice Awards: Best Summer Comedy Movie.[41]
ITV National Movie Awards
- Best Family Film (Won)
- Special Honorary Award (Won)
Spike TV's Scream Awards
- Best Science Fiction Movie (Lost to Iron Man)
- Breakout Performance: WALL-E (Won)
Disney are pushing for an Academy Award for Best Picture nomination; chairman Dick Cook felt "If we didn’t do it, I don’t think we’d be giving the movie its due." Only one other animated film, 1991's Beauty and the Beast, was nominated for that award.[42]
Home media
The film will be released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc in Region 1 on November 18, 2008 and in Region 2 on November 24, 2008 - both in a standard and special edition version.[43] The special editions of WALL-E will have a second disc with special features, and a third disc that includes a bonus digital copy of the film. Special features include several deleted scenes, an audio commentary with director Andrew Stanton, the short film Presto, a new short film BURN-E, an animation sound design featurette, and the documentary The Pixar Story.[44]
See also
- List of Pixar film references lists references made in this film to other films produced by Pixar.
References
- ^ "Pixar Projection - Home". Pixar.com. Retrieved 2008-09-10.
- ^ "Production Budget of Wall E". Boxofficemojo. Retrieved 2008-07-12.
- ^ a b "Movie WALL-E - Box Office Data, News, Cast Information". The Numbers. Retrieved 2008-11-08.
- ^ a b c Eric Vespe (2008-02-24). "WonderCon: Quint sees some WALL-E and Prince Caspian footage at Disney's panel! Plus Q&A with Andrew Stanton!". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
- ^ Siklos, Richard (2008-05-09). "Apple and Eve". CNNMoney.com. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
- ^ Eric Vespe (2008-04-09). "Quint discusses the Pixar half of the Disney Animation Presentation! UP! WALL-E! TOY STORY 3! NEWT! THE BEAR & THE BOW!". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved 2008-04-09.
- ^ a b c d e Peter Scieretta (2007-07-28). "Comic-Con: Indepth Wall-E Details Revealed". Slash Film. Retrieved 2007-10-03.
- ^ a b c Eric Vespe (2007-08-11). "Quint sits down with WALL-E director Andrew Stanton!!!". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved 2007-08-11.
- ^ a b Eric Vespe (2007-08-01). "Quint catches up on Disney's Prince Caspian and WALL-E panel at Comic-Con!!!". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved 2007-08-01.
- ^ James White (April 2008). "How We Made WALL-E". Total Film. pp. 113–116.
- ^ Tom Ambrose (2007-07-26). "Heroes of 2008". Empire. p. 72.
- ^ a b Alex Billington (2008-02-24). "WonderCon: Pixar's Wall-E Presentation - Incredible!". FirstShowing.net. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
- ^ Anthony Baratta (2008-04-07). "First Look: Disney/Pixar's WALL-E". ComingSoon.net. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
- ^ Desowitz, Bill. "Hello, WALL•E!: Pixar Reaches for the Stars". Animation World Magazine. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
- ^ Dawn C. Chmielewski (2008-06-25). "'Wall-E' draws design inspiration from Apple". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
- ^ Steve Fritz (2007). "A talk with John Lasseter: What the man in Disney's chair has to say". Newsarama. Retrieved 2007-11-04.
- ^ "Justin Wright (IV)". Internet Movie Database. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
- ^ a b "Production notes" (PDF). Walt Disney Pictures. Retrieved 2008-07-19.
- ^ "ScoreKeeper Chats With Composer Thomas Newman!!". Ain't It Cool News. 2008-09-16. Retrieved 2008-09-17.
- ^ Wortham, Jenna (2008-07-07). "Video Pick: Pixar's Magical Short, Presto". Wired. Retrieved 2008-07-13.
- ^ "Wall-E rolls out for world premiere". The Press Association. 2008-06-23. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
- ^ "WALL-E (2008) - Daily Box Office Results". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-06-29.
- ^ "WALL-E (2008) - Weekend Box Office Results". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-06-29.
- ^ "Pixar Movies". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-06-29.
- ^ a b "WALL-E: Reviews". Metacritic. CNET Networks, Inc. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
- ^ a b "WALL-E Movie Reviews". Rotten Tomatoes. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
- ^ a b c Todd McCarthy (2008-06-26). "WALL-E Review". Variety. Retrieved 2008-06-26.
- ^ a b Kirk Honeycutt (2006-06-25). "Film Review: WALL-E". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2008-06-26.
- ^ Roger Ebert (2008-06-26). "WALL-E review". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2008-06-30.
- ^ Jessica Jensen (2008-06-30). "Wall-E: Robotic Ode to Environmental Protection". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2008-06-30.
- ^ Ali Frick (2008-07-01). "Right-Wing Apoplectic Over Pixar's WALL-E: 'Malthusian Fear Mongering,' 'Fascistic Elements'". Think Progress. Center for American Progress. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
- ^ Shannen W. Coffin (2006-06-30). "WALL-E, No Thanks". National Review Online. Jack Fowler. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
- ^ Jonah Goldberg (2006-06-30). "Re: WALL-E". National Review Online. Jack Fowler. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
- ^ Patrick J. Ford (2008-06-30). "WALL-E's Conservative Critics". The American Conservative. Ron Unz. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
- ^ Stanton, Andrew; Pixar; WALL-E. "Pixar's Andrew Stanton, Animating from Life" (Audio) (Audio). Retrieved 2008-07-10.
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- ^ a b Megan Basham (2008-06-28). "WALL-E world". World Magazine. Nickolas S. Eicher. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
- ^ Kyle Smith (2008-06-26). "Disney's "Wall-E": A $170 Million Art Film". kylesmithonline.com. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
- ^ Maura Judkis (2008-06-30). "Will 'WALL-E' Make Us Greener?". U.S. News & World Report. Kerry F. Dyer.
{{cite news}}
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ignored (help) - ^ "Nominees World Soundtrack Awards 2008 announced". World Soundtrack Awards. 2008-08-20. Retrieved 2008-08-26.
- ^ Staff (2008-06-24). "2008 Teen Choice Awards winners and nominees". Los Angeles Times: The Envelope. David Hiller. Retrieved 2008-08-14.
- ^ Michael Cieply, Brooks Barnes (2008-10-27). "Studios Are Pushing Box Office Winners as Oscar Contenders". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-10-28.
- ^ "WALL-E DVD/Blu-ray coming Nov. 18". The Pixar Blog. 2008-08-15.
- ^ The Pixar Blog: 'Pixar Story' coming soon to DVD: Iwerks
External links
- Official site
- Template:Bcdb title
- WALL-E at IMDb
- ‹The template AllMovie title is being considered for deletion.› WALL-E at AllMovie
- WALL-E at Box Office Mojo
- WALL-E at Rotten Tomatoes
- WALL-E at Metacritic
- WALL-E hidden references ("Easter eggs")
- Archived version of Buy n Large