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WALL-E (2008)

Release Date:
Friday, June 27, 2008

MPAA Rating:
G

Genre:
Adventure, Animation

Starring:
Fred Willard, Jeff Garlin, John Ratzenberger, Ben Burtt

Written By:
Andrew Stanton

Director:
Andrew Stanton

Official Site:

Synopsis:
What if humankind had to leave Earth, and somebody forgot to turn the last robot off? After hundreds of lonely years of doing what he was built for, WALL•E (short for Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class) discovers a new purpose in life (besides collecting knick-knacks) when he meets a sleek search robot named EVE.

WALL-E (2008) | Review

There and Back Again
Ken Priebe

Content Image
In a twist of irony, earlier this week I was looking through my house for something and stumbled instead upon an old notebook of mine from University of Michigan that I kept. It was my film journal from a course I took on "Future Visions" consisting of a series of science-fiction films we had to study and write about. I spent some time reading through it all, and found it to be ample preparation for seeing WALL-E this weekend. I just didn't know at the time there would be a connection.

In particular, the main theme that I had deduced from many of the films in the course was the idea that mankind seems to evolve both in mind and in body. In body, we have evolved up to a certain point and stopped, but our minds keep evolving, and as a result, we develop technology that allows us to do so. But over and over again we transcend our limitations only up to a point and bounce right back to where we came, and we regress into the past, or into a realization of the need for love & community. I had noticed this idea pan out over many films, in particular Things to Come, Blade Runner, Solaris, Altered States (which wasn't part of the course but it could have been), and 2001: A Space Odyssey.

The film Things to Come (1936) represents a futuristic society whose attire and architecture has regressed back to days of ancient Rome. People dress in togas and artists build giant columns and statues, all in the name of "progress" which is ironically "re"gressing back to a more primitive state, as if starting all over again. Blade Runner (1982) is a post-modern masterpiece which is set in the future, but has elements of 1930s film noir, regressing back to the lighting and atmosphere of the classic "dame with a case" stories. In the original film version of the film Solaris (1972), the lead character Kelvin's journey to the stars ends with a rendition of the prodigal son, where he encounters his father on a deserted island and returns to his arms in forgiveness. Altered States (1980) is about William Hurt's character Dr. Jessup, who becomes obsessed with scientific experiments that regress him back to an early ape-like version of man, and ultimately to the terrifying spark of the beginning of life itself, only to be overcome by admitting his love for his wife. And finally, in 2001, Dave the Spaceman shuts down the dehumanizing HAL and proceeds through the planet Jupiter, experiencing death and rebirth.

wall-e002.jpg (81 K)This brings us to the brilliant fable WALL-E, an animated film that has the maturity to stand amongst these classic tales of science-fiction and give its own spin upon this recurrent theme. By leaving Earth and traveling into the far reaches of space and taking the most advanced technology imaginable along with them, mankind does not progress, but rather regresses. The far reaches of their mind's evolution has been transferred into the technology they have created, to the point that their humanity as even been transferred more into their machines than in themselves. The ability to love and empathize is apparent in the robots WALL-E and EVE, and the ability to dominate and deceive is apparent in the "steering wheel" computer driving the ship. (The red-eye is an obvious nod to HAL from 2001.) Due to the vacuum of space and the over-reliance on technology, mankind has regressed into big spoiled babies. The hovercrafts they travel around in were specifically designed only for the elderly, but eventually the system they created overtook them and they all succumbed to being isolated in their own electronic wombs.

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