Movie Review: Wall·E
| Title: | Wall·E (2008) |
| Rating: | 7/10 |
We traveled as a family downtown this afternoon to catch the 4:45pm
showing of Wall·E
at the magnificent Seattle Cinerama.
The kids have been looking forward to seeing the movie for a few
months (I downloaded the Wall·E trailers off the PlayStation
Store as soon as they were posted and the kids have been watching them
ever since... imitating the robot's unique pronunciation of his own
name).
The movie is very good, not Pixar's best (The Incredibles still
tops my Pixar list), but far better than last year's Ratatouille
(which I just noticed I never bothered to even provide a review for...
and I'm usually very thorough about such things). For comparison, this
might help:
The Incredibles... 9.01/10
Monsters Inc...... 9/10
Toy Story......... 8/10
Toy Story 2....... 8/10
Wall·E............ 7/10
Cars.............. 6/10
Finding Nemo...... 6/10
Ratatouille....... 5/10
A Bug's Life...... 5/10
Wall·E is a robot, the sole inhabitant remaining on a future
planet Earth. Earth has been abandoned because of its filthy state and
a legion of Wall·E trash compacting robots were left behind to
clean up the joint. Only one Wall·E robot remains operational.
Wall·E is joined by a visiting robot "EVE" who is investigating
Earth's re-inhabitability. Wall·E is instantly smitten and
stows away on EVE's spaceship back to the "Axiom", a space-bound cruise
ship where the remainder of the human race now lives. At the center of
the movie is a plant seedling that Wall·E finds during his trash
cleanup duties on Earth and then gives to EVE as a token of his affection.
There isn't much to the plot and very little dialog to speak of (pun
intended). Yet, Wall·E accomplishes quite a bit with very
little. The character Wall·E has an "ET"-like charm that
endears himself to the audience. The interaction and playfulness between
Wall·E and EVE is quite touching at times. When the movie is
developing the relationship between the two robots, the film works very
well. The "human" characters and plot didn't work as well and although
the two plot lines were necessarily symbiotic (to advance each other),
they didn't enmesh particularly well. In other words, Wall·E
feels like two movies... one that was really good (the robot love story),
and one that was just so-so (the humans returning to Earth).
Summary: Worth the dollars to see it on the big screen.
:: Posted by rus on Mon, 07 Jul 2008 11:20 pm
:: Filed under /reviews/movies
Wild Hair
The state of Olivia's hair this morning after she woke up reminded me
of Eliana back in the day. When I looked for the picture, I found that
the pictures of both girls (see below) were taken at pretty much the same
time... about 3 weeks before they turn 2 years old. Enjoy!
Other than the crazy hair, the two girls looks completely different (to
me anyway).
After Eight
All three of my kids woke up after 8am this morning. The
Second Coming
shall soon commence.
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