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WALL·E (2008)
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Übersicht
Werbezeile:
An Adventure Beyond the Ordinar-E mehrPlot:
In the distant future, a small waste collecting robot inadvertently embarks on a space journey that will ultimately decide the fate of mankind. full summary | full synopsis (warning! may contain spoilers)Nutzerkommentare:
WALL-E Brings Pathos to Computer Animation mehrUS Showtimes:
(register to personalize)Besetzung
(Auswahl der im Abspann genannten Besetzung)| Ben Burtt | ... | WALLE / M-O (voice) | |
| Elissa Knight | ... | EVE (voice) | |
| Jeff Garlin | ... | Captain (voice) | |
| Fred Willard | ... | Shelby Forthright, BnL CEO | |
| MacInTalk | ... | AUTO (voice) | |
| John Ratzenberger | ... | John (voice) | |
| Kathy Najimy | ... | Mary (voice) | |
| Sigourney Weaver | ... | Ship's Computer (voice) | |
| übrige Besetzung in alphabetischer Reihenfolge: | |||
| Kim Kopf | ... | Hoverchair mother (voice) | |
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Parents Guide:
View content advisory for parentsLänge:
98 MinProduktionsland:
USASprache:
EnglischSeitenverhältnis:
2.35 : 1 mehrAltersfreigabe:
South Africa:A | Canada:G (Alberta/British Columbia/Manitoba/Ontario/Québec) | USA:G (certificate #44354) | New Zealand:G | Finland:K-3 | Sweden:Btl | Singapore:G | Argentina:Atp | Peru:PT | Iceland:L | Australia:G | South Korea:All | UK:U | Ireland:G | France:U | Hong Kong:I | Malaysia:U | Netherlands:AL | Brazil:LivreMOVIEmeter: 
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Dies und das:
The film contains numerous references to Apple computers: -when WALL-E is fully charged by the sun, he makes the same "boot up" sound that most of Apple's Macintosh computers have made since circa 1996. -WALL-E watches his favorite movie every night on the screen of an iPod -The villainous Autopilot's voice is provided by Apple's text-to-speech system, MacinTalk -EVE's sleek design as an evolution of WALL-E's parallels the sleek iMac design having evolved from the boxy, beige Apple IIe. Steve Jobs, Founder, Chairman and CEO of Apple Computer, was CEO of Pixar until its acquisition by Disney in 2005, and as a shareholder and member of the Disney Board of Directors is still actively involved with the company. mehrPannen:
Abfolgefehler: Wall•e first presents the plant to EVE while facing her directly. Later, when EVE replays the same scene in the Captain's quarters, Wall•e is shown holding the plant from a 3/4 profile. mehrDialogzitate:
[last lines]Captain: This is called farming! You kids are gonna grow all sorts of things! Vegetable plants, pizza plants... it's good to be home!
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Ausschnittsweise enthalten in "Just In with Laura Ingraham: (2008-07-01)" (2008) mehrSoundtrack:
La Vie en Rose mehrHäufig gestellte Fragen (FAQ)
What's that middle dot in WALL·E's name and how do I make it?Was EVE sapient before she met WALL·E, or was it exposure to his personality that created hers?
Where can I learn more about this movie's backstory?
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Pixar has produced some of the best animation in the past decade with its computer-generated features (Toy Story, Monsters Inc., and Finding Nemo) that have been marked by strong story lines and vivid characters. The tradition continues in an impressive way with Wall-E. This deceptively simple tale is transformed by the emotional content told almost entirely through visuals.
A polluted Earth has become uninhabitable for 700 years, and one of its only residents is Wall-E, a small robot whose solitary mission is to be a mobile, trash compactor. In his work, he also finds and collects trivial, odd artifacts of mankind's past such as a Rubik's cube. He comforts himself with an old video, Hello Dolly, and as he learns about humans and his yearning for love, it becomes his idyllic vision of happiness amid an insulated, dull existence. Along his travels, he comes across a unique find, a live plant! One day a spaceship lands and deposits a robot probe. Fascinated by this kindred machine, Wall-E follows and eventually befriends this unit known as Eve. Eve has a directive that will hopefully return humans to Earth if only it can sustain life, and Wall-E's plant figures immeasurably. Eve is returned to her mother ship with Wall-E frantically chasing after his newly found love. On a spaceship acting as a living city for its machine-dependent, overweight humans, little robots are not only the caregivers, but in control. Wall-E and Eve must figure a way to return the humans to earth and find happiness even if it means making the ultimate sacrifice.
Wall-E's innocence and childlike wonder (think E.T.), as exemplified by how he introduces himself to everyone he meets, could almost have sprung from Steven Spielberg's imagination. It's in the small details that enrich Wall-E as a character. He brings to mind an amalgam of past robots like Star Wars' R2-D2 and the little robots in Silent Running, and his fears and joys are expressed through body language and squeals. When he shuts down each night to sleep, he rocks himself as a child would. He is clumsy around Eve, and when he takes her to his makeshift home of robot parts and paraphernalia, he is like a little kid. Ironically, he is the catalyst to bring the humans back home.
Writer and director, Andrew Stanton (Finding Nemo), takes a huge risk by basing the film's premise almost entirely on a song from Hello Dolly. I can't think of an animated film that relied so much on visual storytelling. Even Fantasia and Allegro Non Troppo were collections of musical sequences not narrative features. In a way, this film is almost too sophisticated in its display and execution for little kids but is just right for adults. Remarkably, this is a tale with nary a spoken word by the principals. One has to think of silent films to approach this achievement. The operative word here is pathos like the best of Charlie Chaplin's little tramp and, amazingly, this film earns its stripes by emoting body language, action, and sound effects. Yet most of the characters aren't even human!
Fred Willard has an amusing small role as the corporate president. Sigourney Weaver, as the ship's computer voice, is an inspired choice since, like Eve, she was a female hero (in the Alien movies) and had to deal with computer voices in those films. The animation is almost 3-D in its rich detail and simulated, fluid camera-work. The interior of the mother ship, the Axiom, is a futuristic view of a commercialized (think Blade Runner) city in space.
Yes, it is a thinly veiled message for all those 'save the earth' and 'think green' people, but that never detracts from the main theme of saving humanity amid a touching love story. There are moments when you think a scene could have played out a bit better, but that is minor. It is likely that Wall-E's reputation will grow over time as a shining example of stretching the art form by challenging and trusting its audience. Bravo to the folks at Pixar for taking a chance and for entertaining and moving us.