Sunday, June 5, 2011

WALL-E Review






WALL-E


Release Date:
18th 
September 2008 – Australia


Production Companies
Walt Disney Pictures
Pixar Animation Studios

Distribution
Walt Disney Studios Motion
Pictures Australia


Genre: Animation/Family/
Sci-Fi

Rating: G

Runtime: 98 minutes


Budget: $180,000,000

Box Office Gross: $521,311,890 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
In the distant future, humanity will leave Earth after it gets covered with too much garbage. After 700 years of collecting trash (as what he's built for), the curious and lovable robot WALL-E falls in love for the first time with a sleek search probe named EVE.

It leads to a fantastic journey across the galaxy where
WALL-E comes aboard a spaceship, the Axiom, and must help EVE, the pilot and some malfunctioning robots to retrieve a plant and save Earth.


Voice Cast
Ben Burtt WALL-E/M-O
Elissa Knight EVE
Jeff Garlin Captain
MacInTalk AUTO
John Ratzenberger John
Kathy Najimy Mary
Sigourney Weaver Axiom's Computer
Teddy Newton  Additional Voices
Pete Docter  Additional Voices
Lori Richardson – Additional Voices

Live-Action Cast
Fred Willard – Shelby Forthright, Bnl CEO


Crew
Original Story/Screenplay/
Director Andrew Stanton
Original Story Pete Docter
Screenplay/Story
Supervisor  Jim Reardon
Associate Producer Thomas Porter
Executive Producer John Lasseter
Producer Jim Morris
Co-Producer Lindsey Collins
Visual Consultants Roger Deakins and Dennis Muren
Production Designer Ralph Eggleston
Character Art Director  Jason Deamer
Sets Art Director  Anthony Christov
Shader Art Director – Bert Berry
Production/Storyboard Artist/Directing
Animator Angus MacLane
Director of Photography: Camera Jeremy Lasky
Director of Photography: Lighting
Danielle Feinberg
Director of Photography: Live-Action
Martin Rosenberg
Lighting Consultant – Sharon Calahan
Production Manager – Andrea Warren
Supervising Animators  Alan Barillaro
and Steven Clay Hunter
Character Supervisor  Bill Wise
Sets Supervisor  David Munier
Crowds Supervisor  Mark Thomas Henne
Supervising Technical Director Nigel Hardwidge
Technical Pipeline Supervisor John Warren
Effects Supervisor David MacCarthy
Visual Effects Supervisor: ILM Edward Hirsh
Visual Effects Supervisor: Pixar, Live-Action
Unit – Richard E. Hollander
Digital Production Supervisor: ILM Patrick Tubach
Layout Supervisor: ILM Brian Cantwell
Original Dialogue (Uncredited)/Re-Recording
Mixer/Sound & Character Voice Designer/
Sound Effects Recordist (Uncredited)/
Supervising Sound Editor & Mixer  Ben Burtt
Supervising Sound Editor – Matthew Wood
Assistant Supervising Sound Editor – Coya Elliott
Sound Effects Editors – Teresa Eckton,
Dustin Cawood and Al Nelson
Re-Recording Mixers – Tom Myers
and Michael Semanick
Foley Artists – Jana Vance and Dennie Thorpe
Foley Mixer – Frank Rinella
Film Editor Stephen Schaffer
Second Film Editors  Axel Geddes,
Jason Hudak and Nicholas C. Smith
Additional Editing  Kevin Nolting
Direction: End Titles – Jim Capobianco
Music Thomas Newman
Music Supervisor  Tom MacDougall
Executive Music Producer  Chris Montan
Music/Lyrics/Performer: Down to Earth –
Peter Gabriel


Awards

2009 Academy Awards
Best Animated Feature Andrew Stanton (Won)
-----------------
Best Original Score Thomas Newman (Nominated)
Best Original Song "Down to Earth"
Peter Gabriel and Thomas Newman (Nominated)
Best Sound Editing Ben Burtt and
Matthew Wood (Nominated)
Best Sound Mixing Tom Myers,
Michael Semanick and Ben Burtt (Nominated)
Best Original Screenplay Andrew Stanton,
Jim Reardon and Pete Docter (Nominated)


Review
WALL-E is a charming, funny, exciting, beautiful and cute CGI animated film that's an outstanding effort from Disney and Pixar. I was affected by its ecological message where the planet Earth has suffered from an environmental disaster, the abandoned cities and the population evacuated to a ship called The Axiom. I enjoyed the romantic relationship between the two robots, EVE and WALL-E, and their connection is a focal point of the movie. Almost all of the film is silent except for the characters' interactions. However, it is only present in the movie's first half-hour.

The excellent sound design is a breath of fresh air. Thanks to Ben Burtt of Star Wars fame, who even created the robotic voices, including WALL-E's, which he also provided. The musical score by Thomas Newman is vivid to listen to and compliments the sequences quite well.

WALL-E was one of my favourite films and is much better than the sci-fi family movie E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial because it creates a heartfelt story. The world in this film is unique and unparalleled in any other picture I've seen. Like Disney's Lilo & Stitchit did succeed in the sci-fi animation boom where others tried and failed. I cannot think of a single bad thing about this animated hit. It's reflected in my star rating. In closing, it's an absolute must-see film.

Star rating: (5/5) Best Movie Ever

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3 comments:

  1. Wall.e is good movie I like the part where Moe is trying to clean him and he get stuck in the airlock doors.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The movie is quiet amazing what I don't get is why all the people were fat and in the chairs and had only robots working. thats cool

    ReplyDelete
  3. I think wall.e was based on a city which has been abandoed. it is really odd how you trash a city come on that is wrong

    ReplyDelete