He's one for the ages, no mouth, but good strong eyes, and maybe in the post-apolyptic dystopia he lives in in Hollywood Pixar land, he can also see what polar cities will be like... Go go, Wall-E!
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Anonymous
said...
Much has been made already of the film's lack of dialogue, communicating its robot love story largely through pantomime. Here are some other ways WALL·E may surprise:
•It's the end of the world, kids. Few family-friendly films can claim a post-apocalyptic wasteland as a setting. In WALL·E, Earth is a cinder, humans are gone, and the trash-collecting robot does his futile duty in a vast landscape of destruction.
"What makes it different is that it has a much darker vision than it looks like on the surface," says Annalee Newitz, editor of the sci-fi website io9.com. "Some of the dystopian elements are between the lines, but if you watch carefully, you realize that all the humans on Earth are destroyed, implicitly."
1 comment:
Much has been made already of the film's lack of dialogue,
communicating its robot love story largely through pantomime. Here are
some other ways WALL·E may surprise:
•It's the end of the world, kids. Few family-friendly films can claim
a post-apocalyptic wasteland as a setting. In WALL·E, Earth is a
cinder, humans are gone, and the trash-collecting robot does his
futile duty in a vast landscape of destruction.
"What makes it different is that it has a much darker vision than it
looks like on the surface," says Annalee Newitz, editor of the sci-fi
website io9.com. "Some of the dystopian elements are between the
lines, but if you watch carefully, you realize that all the humans on
Earth are destroyed, implicitly."
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