Powered by Bravenet Bravenet Blog

Subscribe to Journal

Tag Board

rottweiller fox quesada de barrtientos espino espina: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rottweileromen 1976 porn movie gregory peck centro fox
la actriz del salgado macedonio carolco: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helena_Bonham_Carter en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Park
logan: i was wanting to go to your website to see if i win
http://www.unwto.org/index_s.php#: http://www.unwto.org/index_s.php#
narco lsd salgado macedonio acapulco new york canadá: The New Yorker- [ Traduzca esta página ]Online version of the weekly magazine, with current articles, cartoons, blogs, audio, video, slide shows, an archive of articles and abstracts back to 1925.www.newyorker.com/ - Páginas similaresArchiveArtsFictionCartoon Caption Contest Online OnlyReportingAbout UsContents for March 24th Más resultados de newyorker.com »
Korner: blog hopping here.
Bits & Pieces: hello...would you care to exchange link? if so let me know so I can add your link to my blog. tnx

Please type in the four characters shown in the black box.

Tuesday, July 1st 2008

11:01 AM

Robotic romance has a heart of gold

Nothing beats a great movie @ a drive-in. And no one tells a better animated film than Pixar. Friday started out as the best of both worlds with 'Wall-E.'

This purfect union turned sour with the sky opened. A relentless rain and gusting wind chased us inside. But little 'Wall-E' held fast to our hearts despite this.

Review: Robot romance `Wall-e' has heart of gold
 
Jun 26, 4:12 AM (ET)

By CHRISTY LEMIRE

Within the rumbling, stumbling hunk of junk that is WALL-E beats the sweetest, warmest heart - a robotic representation of humanity's highest potential.

And within the sci-fi adventure "WALL-E" lies an artistic truth: that Pixar's track record remains impeccable.

Following high-concept movies about a superhero family, talking cars and a gourmet rat, this is the Disney computer animation arm's boldest experiment yet. "WALL-E" is essentially a silent film in which the two main characters, a mismatched pair of robots, communicate through bleeps and blips and maybe three words between them.

And yet director Andrew Stanton ("Finding Nemo") is resourceful enough to find infinite ways for them to express themselves - amusingly, achingly, and with emotional precision. He's also created, with the help of a team of animators, a visual marvel. Not that this is in any way surprising from a Pixar flick, but still, it's worth noting.

 
The smudged, dented metal that makes up WALL-E's frame looks so realistic, you could reach out and touch it; at the same time, his big eyes often appear so vulnerable and pleading, you can't help but feel a connection with him. The characters are adorable without being too cutesy, accessible to adults and children alike.

Ben Burtt, a multiple Oscar winner who created R2-D2's signature sound effects in the "Star Wars" movies, provides the "voice" of WALL-E, or Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class. Seven hundred years after Earth was abandoned, leaving the planet looking like a post-apocalyptic Tomorrowland, WALL-E is still doing the job he was programmed to do: pick up all the trash he sees around him and compress it into tidy packages.

But he's a romantic at heart with an eye for nostalgia, sifting through garbage for items like bowling pins, a Rubik's Cube, an iPod, a spork. The script, which Stanton co-wrote with Jim Reardon from a story he co-wrote with Pete Docter, evokes iconic cultural items and imagery without going for the cheap pun or empty celebrity gag. Genuflections to "2001: A Space Odyssey" and "Alien" seem fitting, as does WALL-E's physical resemblance to E.T. (It's one of the movies that earned Burtt an Academy Award for best sound effects editing.)

He's an odd, lovely combination: He carries himself like a little old man, but has the innocence and wonderment of a child. It's only upon the arrival of the sleek, shiny Eve (voiced by Elissa Knight), a robot sent back to the planet on a search mission, that he realizes how lonely he's been. That she's everything he's not - new, quick, high-tech, efficient - is only part of the allure. She's someone with whom he can finally share all the lost treasures he's amassed, and she seems open to the idea of making a friend in him, too.

Meanwhile, somewhere in the universe, the remaining humans are lolling about in a giant flying cruise ship. (Kathy Najimy and Pixar veteran John Ratzenberger provide two of the passengers' voices, with Jeff Garlin as their boisterous but clueless captain.) Thanks to the big, evil corporation that runs the place (and ruined Earth), every convenience is available at their chubby fingertips - oh yes, we as a people have gotten fatter and lazier in the future, it seems. And the possibility of useless consumption is overpowering and ever-present.

So maybe it's more than a little hypocritical for a movie that's being distributed by a worldwide entertainment conglomerate to condemn needless spending on food, toys, stuff, you name it. Fred Willard, the only live-action human, plays the film's CEO with typically humorous buffoonery - perhaps that's intended to make the message more palatable.

You could busy your brain which such complex thoughts. You're more likely, though, to walk out of the theater with the rare joy of knowing that you've just witnessed something that touched your heart.

"WALL-E," a Walt Disney Pictures release, is rated G. Running time: 97 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

As a drive-in fan, I have seen nights like this before. Usually, cars will start to scatter if the rain holds on. No one left the front row before intermission.

In fact, very few left during intermission. This is odd enough on a good night. So, either they loved this robotic romance or they had to see 'Get Smart.'

- Paul   &

0 total marks.

There are no comments to this entry.

Post New Comment

BraveJournal Member Non-Member
No Smilies More Smilies »

Please type in the four characters shown in the black box.