Blu-Ray Review: WALL·E (Three-Disc Special Edition)

Part of: Features From The Blu Lagoon

WALL·E finds the gang at Pixar, led by director and co-writer Andrew Stanton, continuing their high level of quality, animated filmmaking with a multi-layered futuristic tale about life and love.

The film opens on an Earth of the future, where the human population has left because the planet has become inhabitable due to all the garbage created by mass consumption. Our robot hero, WALL·E, is a Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-class. It has been working for about 700 years collecting, compacting, and storing garbage. WALL·E has a companion, Hal the Roach, and spends downtime watching a videotape of Hello, Dolly!

One day, a giant spaceship lands and leaves behind EVE (Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator). WALL·E falls in love and tries to get EVE’s attention but EVE remains focused on the mission. WALL·E’s charm wins over EVE, but one evening at WALL·E’s home, WALL·E shows EVE a plant he found, which triggers EVE’s programming. EVE takes the plant and powers down except for what is needed for a homing beacon. Ever the gentle-robot, WALL·E takes care of EVE. When the ship arrives for EVE, WALL·E hitches a ride.

Once on board the Axiom, where the remainder of humanity currently resides in floating chairs, the plant is brought to the Captain, who like all the other humans has become obese and barely mobile due to over-reliance on robots and technology. The plant is proof that life can once again exist on Earth and it needs to placed into a machine that will trigger the ship’s return. However, the ship’s autopilot, Auto, has other plans and tries to destroy the plant.

WALL·E is a grand adventure, enjoyable on its surface alone but becomes much more interesting when the deeper themes are examined. It’s also a lot of fun, owing a debt to many films that came before, from silent comedies (it’s 22 minutes before the first dialogue between WALL·E and EVE takes place) to sci-fi classics (Auto has a number of similarities to HAL9000 from 2001: A Space Odyssey).

The look of the film is amazing, due in part to award-winning director of photography Roger Deakins who was brought in as a visual consultant. It looks like nothing was lost in the transfer to Blu-ray, which is presented in 1080p High Definition and 2.39:1 aspect ratio. There is amazing detail consistently throughout the film. Highlights include the rust on WALL·E’s body, the dust kicking up from WALL·E’s treads, the reflections coming off WALL·E’s lenses, the material shooting from fire extinguisher, and the texture of space ship. Space also looked flawless with its pockets of blackness and violet nebulas. The colors are brilliant from the drab earth tones on Earth to the bright, vibrant spectrum used within the Axiom. They even added sun flare as if there was a camera lens filming everything. There was some digital artifacting during very bright sequences when there was another element in the air to diffuse the light, such as dust, smoke, or clouds. One scene it was noticeable was when the ship dropping EVE off arrived.

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Article Author: El Bicho

This writer is a member of The Masked Movie Snobs, a collective that fights a never-ending battle against bad entertainment.

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  • Wall-E (Three-Disc Special Edition + Digital Copy and BD Live) [Blu-ray] Wall-E (Three-Disc Special Edition + Digital Copy and BD Live) [Blu-ray]

    The highly acclaimed director of Finding Nemo and the creative storytellers behind Cars and Ratatouille transport you to a galaxy not so far away for a new cosmic comedy adventure about a determined robot named Wall-E. ...

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