The people at Pixar never underestimate their audience. That may explain why they released a movie such as "WALL E," which contains relatively little dialogue and depicts striking images of a ...
When Wall-E rode a fire extinguisher inside the Starship Axiom midway through his adventurous pursuit of Eve, little did anyone know he flew right past the movie's short sequel, Burn-E.
Fifteen years ago today, a little rust-bucket robot named WALL-E ambled his way into theaters, touting a story of hope in a world desiccated with man-made debris. The movie’s concern for consumerism, ...
One of the most romantic scenes in the past 100 years of movies is in WALL-E as the titular character and his girl robot EVE float and space walk through outer space. There’s more creativity, ...
Erick Massoto is a Brazilian writer who's always loved film and TV and loves finding connections between them. That's why he supports double features, especially if they are of a modern film paired ...
This is a revision of an earlier posting. The new Pixar picture Wall-E is one for the ages, a masterpiece to be savored before or after the end of the world — assuming, like the title character, ...
The Wall-E concept actually dates back to Pixar’s very beginnings — even before Toy Story was produced. After Finding Nemo finally came out, the gears started cranking and the team began work on the ...
Andrew Stanton describes the inspiration for 2008's 'WALL-E' for The Hollywood Reporter's 'It Happened in Hollywood' podcast. By Seth Abramovitch Senior Writer Andrew Stanton had a great idea for a ...