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      • The two adorable robots W.A.L.L-E (stand for Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-class) and EVE, are biblical representations of Adam and Eve. Adam and Eve, according to Abrahamic religions, are the first humans that are created by God.
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WALL-EWALL-E - Wikipedia

    WALL-E (stylized with an interpunct as WALL·E) is a 2008 American animated romantic science fiction film produced by Pixar Animation Studios for Walt Disney Pictures. The film was directed by Andrew Stanton, produced by Jim Morris, and written by Stanton and Jim Reardon.

  3. www.imdb.com › title › tt0910970WALL·E (2008) - IMDb

    WALL·E: Directed by Andrew Stanton. With Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight, Jeff Garlin, Fred Willard. In the distant future, a small waste-collecting robot inadvertently embarks on a space journey that will ultimately decide the fate of mankind.

    • Andrew Stanton
    • 3 min
  4. Is 'WALL-E' based on a book? WALL·E is based on an original script by American screenwriter Andrew Stanton, who also directed the film. Stanton has said in interviews that the idea behind the WALL·E character was the last of the thoughts discussed at the now legendary 1994 lunch meeting where he, John Lasseter, Pete Docter, and Joe Ranft came ...

    • Plot
    • Cast and Characters
    • Production
    • Themes
    • Reception
    • Accolades
    • Trivia
    • External Links

    Throughout the 21st century, Earth was governed by the Buy n Large mega-corporation (BnL), causing mass consumerism and covering the planet in dense loads of trash by 2105. In an attempt to resolve the situation, Earth's population was evacuated on fully automated luxury BnL starliners for five years while an army of trash compactor robots called W...

    Ben Burtt produced the voice of WALL-E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter – Earth-Class), the title character. WALL-E, a robot who has developed sentience, is the only robot of his type shown to be stil...
    Elissa Knight as EVE(Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator), a sleek robot probe whose directive is to locate vegetation on Earth and verify habitability. She has a glossy white egg-shaped body and...
    Jeff Garlin as Captain B. McCrea, the commander, and apparently only, officer on the Axiom. His duties as captain are boring daily routines, with the ship's autopilot handling all true command func...
    Fred Willard as Shelby Forthright, historical CEO of the Buy n Large Corporation, shown only in videos recorded around the time of the Axiom's initial launch. Constantly optimistic, Forthright prop...

    Writing

    Stanton wrote the screenplay to focus on the visuals and as a guide to what the sound effects needed to convey. Andrew Stanton conceived WALL-E during a lunch with fellow writers John Lasseter, Pete Docter, and Joe Ranft in 1994. Toy Story was nearing completion and the writers brainstormed ideas for their next projects – A Bug's Life, Monsters, Inc., and Finding Nemo– at this lunch. Stanton asked, "What if mankind had to leave Earth and somebody forgot to turn off the last robot?" Having str...

    Design

    WALL-E was the most complex Pixar production since Monsters, Inc. because of the world and the history that had to be conveyed. Whereas most Pixar films have up to 75,000 storyboards, WALL-E required 125,000. Production designer Ralph Eggleston wanted the lighting of the first act on Earth to be romantic, while the second act on the Axiom to be cold and sterile. During the third act, the romantic lighting is slowly introduced into the Axiomenvironment. Pixar studied Chernobyl and the city of...

    Animation

    WALL-E went undeveloped during the 1990s partly because Stanton and Pixar were not confident enough yet to have a feature length film with a main character that behaved like Luxo Jr. or R2-D2. Stanton explained there are two types of robots in cinema: "human[s] with metal skin", like the Tin Man, or "machine[s] with function" like Luxo and R2. He found the latter idea "powerful" because it allowed the audience to project personalities onto the characters, as they do with babies and pets: "You...

    This movie is widely recognized as a critique on our society. It brings up very real issues that the world, and especially densely populated areas, are dealing with today and even more so in the future. Katherine Ellison asserts that “Americans produce nearly 400 million tons of solid waste per year but recycle less than a third of it, according to...

    Release

    Continuing a Pixar tradition, WALL-E was paired with a short film for its theatrical release, Presto. The film was dedicated to Justin Wright (1981–2008), a Pixar animator who had worked on Ratatouille and died of a heart attack before WALL-E'srelease. Walt Disney Imagineering (WDI) built animatronic WALL-Es to promote the picture, which made appearances at Disneyland Resort; the Franklin Institute; the Miami Science Museum; the Seattle Center; and the Tokyo International Film Festival. Due t...

    Box-office performance

    WALL-Egrossed $223,808,164 in the USA and Canada and $297,503,696 overseas for a worldwide total of $521,311,860, marking it the ninth highest grossing film of 2008. The film premiered at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on June 23, 2008. In the USA and Canada, it opened in 3,992 theatres on June 27, 2008. During its opening weekend, it topped the box office with $63,087,526 which is currently the fifth-best opening weekend for a Pixar film and the fourth-best opening among films released in...

    Home media

    1. Main article: WALL-E (video) The film was released by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on November 18, 2008. The various editions included Presto, a new short film BURN-E, the Leslie Iwerks documentary film The Pixar Story, shorts about the history of Buy n Large, the behind-the-scenes special features and a Digital Copy of the film that can be played through iTunes or Windows Media and compatible devices. It sold 9,042,054 DVD units ($142,633,974) in total be...

    WALL-E won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and was nominated for Best Original Screenplay, Best Original Score, Best Original Song, Sound Editing, and Sound Mixing at the 81st Academy Awards, which it lost to Slumdog Millionaire, The Dark Knight and Milk, respectively. Walt Disney Pictures also pushed for an Academy Award for Best Pictu...

    Cameos

    1. The trash cubes that WALL-E makes are the same as the trash cubes seen in Monsters, Inc. 2. Toy versions of Rex, Hamm, Mike, and Lightning McQueen, Barbie's car, Knick's snowglobe from Knick Knack, a Buzz Lightyearlunchbox, are found on Earth, a lot of them in the rotating shelves inside WALL•E's truck. 3. There is a Dinocolighter on one of WALL-E's shelves. 4. A Pizza Planet truck is scanned by EVEwhen she arrives on Earth. 5. One of the sea turtles from Finding Nemoappears during the cre...

    Other trivia

    1. Every time WALL-E recharges, the Macintoshboot-up sound can be heard. 2. This is the first Pixar movie to feature live-action recording, which is for the advertisement for the Axiom and the appearances by Shelby Forthright, CEO of Buy n Large. 3. In one of the scenes when EVE is shut down, WALL-E is seen playing the video game Pong on an Atari 2600. 4. Every day, WALL-E watches Hello, Dolly!on an iPod. 5. When leaving Earth on the probe ship, WALL-E crashes in Sputnik-1, the first Earth-or...

    WALL-E at Wikipedia
    WALL•E on Pixar Wiki
    WALL-E (film) on Disney.com
  5. WALL- E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter - Earth-Class, with the formal designation N. 62675) is the titular protagonist of the 2008 Disney/Pixar animated feature film of the same name. He is a waste-collector drone created by...

    • 3 min
  6. www.pixar.com › feature-films › wallePixar Animation Studios

    WALL•E. WALL•E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class) is the last robot left on Earth, programmed to clean up the planet, one trash cube at a time. However, after 700 years, he’s developed one little glitch—a personality. He’s extremely curious, highly inquisitive, and a little lonely.

  7. Jun 22, 2008 · In the distant future, Earth has become a desolate wasteland, abandoned by humanity and overrun by mountains of trash. Amidst the rubble, a small, lovable robot named WALL-E spends his days tirelessly cleaning up the mess.

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