WALL-E is a completely
original work of staggering, visionary genius. The film also
possesses so many brilliant nuances and human insights, and has
such a pure and gentle heart, that it truly has no filmic antecedent.
Wall-E is a robot, living alone (almost) on earth, cleaning
up the trillions of pounds of trash left behind when humanity
departed its uninhabitable planet. Wall-E’s earth wasn’t ravaged
by either a war or a meteor. No, it was decimated by consumerism,
greed, gluttony, and environmental neglect. Wall-E isn’t
living on a post-apocalyptic planet. He’s living on a post-stupidity
planet.
At night, Wall-E, whose only companion is (of course) a cockroach,
seeks refuge inside a metal transport where he collects human
memorabilia. His most prized possession is the same, ancient
VHS video that he watches every night. What does the only robot
on earth watch? TERMINATOR? ARMAGEDDON? ROBOCOP? Of course not.
He swoons every night to a love scene from the 1969 film musical
HELLO DOLLY. Watching the on-screen lovers hold hands sends Wall-E
into a reverie of love and longing that matches any comparable
human scene ever put on screen.
One day, a spaceship lands, depositing a newer, sleeker robot.
Wall-E is at first frightened but then becomes utterly smitten.
That new robot just must be female. He doesn’t know why.
He just KNOWS. After some wonderfully touching and comedic moments,
the robots find a way to communicate. Sure enough, her name is
Eve and Wall-E is a goner.
When, however, he shows her a tiny living plant that he has
found, she immediately grabs it and shuts down. Just as quickly,
her ship returns, whisks her inside, and takes off. Not to be
abandoned by his true love, Wall-E attaches himself to the ship
and takes an interstellar journey that culminates on one of the
huge spaceships on which humanity now resides.
As to the humans aboard, well, folks, the good news is that
we are pampered from morning to night by every automated convenience
that we could possibly imagine. We don’t work. We don’t
need money. We have no conflicts. We have everything we want to
eat and drink at any time we want it and are whisked everywhere
on cushy recliners. The bad news? We have all become so fat that
we literally can’t even walk!
It is on that ship that the rest of the film plays out as Wall-E
and Eve strive to rouse humanity from its hedonistic trance and
encourage us to take our first steps (literal and metaphoric)
towards the renewal of our species. |
WALL-E is beyond dazzling to watch.
To say that it’s an animated film is somewhat like saying
redwoods are just trees. That oceans are just bodies of water.
Or that the sky is just, well, whatever. I have never seen or
even imagined that computer-generated images could look or feel
like this. As I marveled at the visual wonders of each frame
of film, it occurred to me that the images were not really computer-generated. They
were born of the human artists who program the images. In a strange,
beautiful way, both WALL-E’s story and technology wrap
us in the warmth of knowing that our humanity can indeed surpass
and transcend our technology.
The film also shows us how self-indulgent we have become as
a species and how we can, and must, reverse that trend.
For those reasons alone, it is an inspiring, uplifting experience
and a bracing and beautiful change from so many of the films
of the past several years.
And, as we experience the film’s wisdom and wonder, we never
forget that WALL-E is also a poignant, warmhearted, and endearing
romantic comedy. It’s not just “take a
seat, R2D2/ C3PO.” It’s “Move over,
Romeo and Juliet!”
WALL-E (the latest film from the inestimably brilliant Pixar
Studios) has so much on its mind, in its heart, and in its vision
that you truly need to experience the film for yourself. No,
not yourself. Take your whole family. Your whole neighborhood.
Everyone you know. Everyone you don’t know. Just go!! It just may reinvigorate
your hope not only for movies, but also for our own humanity.
Stephen
Simon co-founded
www. Spiritualcinemacircle.com and produced such films as SOMEWHERE
IN TIME and WHAT DREAMS MAY COME. He also directed and produced
both CONVERSATIONS WITH GOD and INDIGO and is the author of THE
FORCE IS WITH YOU: MYSTICAL MOVIES MESSAGES THAT INSPIRE OUR
LIVES.
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