WALL•E is filmmaking at its best. Forget the naysayers who stupidly dismiss an animated film as a kids movie, this film ranks up there with the best of Kubrick and Chaplin (to name two of the directors this film clearly got some inspiration from). The first half an hour or so, is pure visual storytelling, without a word of dialogue being spoken, Stanton manages to set the film in space and time and introduces us to the two main characters. WALL•E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class) is a character much like Chaplin’s tramp, incredibly lovable, someone we can all sympathise (or even empathise with) and much like in Chaplin’s films, there is virtually no dialogue (the two main characters hardly speak a word, aside from each other’s names) and the humour is mostly physical. The animation is top-notch, probably one of the (if not the) best ever and the amount of emotion the characters express through their “drawings” is truly unbelievable. They are only robots, and yet they felt so undeniably human. In fact, I think EVE and WALL•E’s romance is as touching as any of the best romances portrayed by real actors. And it’s all in the details.The lack of dialogue is replaced with some fantastic visual storytelling.
The first shots of the film get us acquainted with the world “today”: stark, sad and desolate and then we finally get a glimpse of the last robot that remains on Earth. With no other robots (or humans) around, WALL•E only has a tiny little cockroach to keep him company (and who knew cockroaches could be so cute?) We follow the adorable robot and his friend for a while, as he endlessly piles rubbish cube after rubbish cube but we immediately realise there’s something different about this robot: he occasionally finds “little treasures” (Rubik’s cube, lighters, light bulbs) that he carefully keeps in his home as his private collection. One particularly important item for WALL•E is a video tape of ‘Hello, Dolly!, which is greatly responsible for his “humanization”. He’s fascinated by dancing, but more importantly, by love (as he sees the characters holding hands and whatnot). WALL•E’s mundane existence, however, suddenly changes when a new robot comes to Earth.
EVE (Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator) came down to Earth with a mission: to find a source of life and bring it back to space so that humans can return to their homes. Although not as immediately obvious as WALL•E, EVE is not an entirely normal robot either as she seems to enjoy flying and occasionally even giggles, but at first she is not interested in his stalker friend WALL•E, who is clearly fascinated by her and continually follows her around (only to fall deeply and madly in love with her). Eventually, the two robots meet properly and WALL•E takes her to his special place, where he starts showing her his most valued objects. Among those, however, there’s a plant and when EVE sees her she automatically grabs it, puts it inside of her and shuts down, waiting for the ship where she came in to return and take her back to space again. WALL•E, already in love and unaware of her mission, however, takes care of her day and night (protecting her from rain, taking her out on “dates”), until one day, the space ship comes back to take her. Nevertheless, he somehow manages to follow her and their space odyssey begins.
The film is a commentary and critique on today’s society values, sure, and the idea that humanity’s “last hope” is a robot (more humane than any of the robotized “real people”) is highly ironic, but at the core of the film there’s a love story and that’s what makes the film particularly special. The chemistry between the two robots, WALL•E’s undying, passionate love for her, EVE’s sudden realisation of her own feelings (in what’s perhaps my favourite scene of the film) and everything related to these two are what make this film as wonderfully touching as it is. It’s PIXAR’s most ambitious and mature work to date and in that it loses some of the humour of the rest of the films and is instead much sadder, but in turn it gains points for pushing the boundaries of animation and creating one of the most powerful, visually arresting, and incredibly moving films of all time.Personal rating: 9/10