WALL-E: Good but Not Great
Review by Steve Friedman -
Jul 3, 2008
18 ratings from readers
The new Disney/Pixar movie WALL-E is, in many respects, an amazing and enjoyable movie. It has one important flaw, however, that prevents it from being a truly great film.
WALL-E is a fairly good movie, but not a great one. There is
much about the film that is simply amazing, but it also has one huge flaw that
holds it back from reaching its potential. I walked out of the theater feeling
somehow empty.
First, I’ll talk about what’s great. This is one of the best looking
animated films of all time. The world created on the screen is beautiful.
The rendering is so photorealistic that they include some
scenes of live action video, and it’s not jarring at all. The images of real
people fit right in with the artificial world.
The movie also creates a fascinating universe. In fact, it creates two
fascinating universes, both of which are incredibly compelling. First, there’s
the desolation of the abandoned Earth overrun by garbage. Second, there’s the
world of the space-cruise liner where everything is run by robots and all the
people on board have forgotten what it means to be human.
Either one of these would be a science-fiction writer’s
dream. The fact that they manage to do
something like that twice is very impressive.
Now the not bad: Some people have complained about the political message, bleak
worldview, and misanthropic ideals behind this film. I say those complaints are
way off-base.
The only political message is that we shouldn’t pollute the earth to the point
that it becomes uninhabitable, which is obvious enough that even the most
ardent anti-environmentalist would agree. You could argue that the movie is
claiming such an outcome is likely given our present course, but I don’t think
that’s necessarily true.
The movie presents a vision of the future, not the
vision of the future. Pixar isn’t saying we’re going to render the Earth
uninhabitable any more than they were saying that toys all come to life when
nobody’s looking or that monsters harness children’s screams as a source of
energy.
It’s just a fairy tale. You could choose to view it as
making a statement, but you have to actually choose to do so. (The same is true
of the idea that one corporation will end up running the world.)
As to the idea of humanity becoming fat lazy incompetent man-blobs, that isn’t
nearly as misanthropic as it would seem on a superficial level. The thing is,
in the world of WALL-E, all of humanity is basically in prison. It’s a
white-collar luxury prison, but it’s still a prison. They can never leave the
cruise ship, they know they’ll be trapped for their entire life, and they know
nothing is going to change. Just as nothing has changed for 700 years.
I suspect the inspiration for the second half of the movie was that a writer
was on a cruise, and thought, “Wouldn’t it be terrible is your entire life was
like this?”
There’s nothing wrong with using a question like that as a
jumping-off point. In fact, I’ve written a screenplay that was originally
inspired by a very similar question. (Mine was, “Wouldn’t it be terrible if the
entire world was like Disneyland?”) It’s not a misanthropic point of view, and
it’s certainly not trying to say people would become fat lazy incompetent
floating blobs if they could.
Every single person in WALL-E is depressed by humanity’s eternal prison
sentence. If you’ve ever been seriously depressed or known someone who was
seriously depressed, you’ll recognize the symptoms.
They believe nothing they do will have any impact — which is
correct for the people in WALL-E — so they don’t bother doing anything. They
overeat, won’t get off the couch, avoid interacting with other people, and
stick to a routine even though it’s a routine they hate.
As an outsider it’s easy to recognize the depressed person’s
behavior only makes him more depressed. He may even objectively agree. But he
can’t work up the energy to do anything differently.
The movie makes it very clear that the people are bored and unhappy with the
state of things. When they’re shaken out of their routine and given the
opportunity to learn, do, and see things, interact with other people, and
recolonize the world, every single person is excited.
Showing people being excited over the things that make us
human reflects a fundamentally positive view of humanity, not a negative one.
So the people who view the movie as misanthropic are flat-out wrong.
There was one big problem I had with the movie: The character of WALL-E itself.
Or rather, the non-character.
WALL-E only possesses animal-level intelligence. It’s cute,
and we can root for it and feel sorry for it, just like we could if we were
watching a puppy. But we can’t identify with it. It’s rare for a story
to succeed with a protagonist that’s too simpleminded for the audience to
identify with, and I don’t think WALL-E pulls it off.
WALL-E and EVE
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Look at movies that are about animals. Excluding the ones where the animals
talk or act with far more than animal intelligence, and the movies where the
protagonist is a human interacting with animals, there aren’t a whole lot of
films left. I can’t think of any examples, though I’m sure there are some that
exist.
The lack of an intelligent central character could be
overcome by a strong and clear enough external goal, but WALL-E lacks this.
WALL-E has a very vague goal: To be with EVE. But there isn’t really a
definition of success or failure in this.
Without a strong enough character or external plot to carry
the story, the only thing left is the setting. The setting is incredibly
strong, but that’s not enough by itself to make the movie a satisfying
experience.
The film that WALL-E most resembled to me was Forrest Gump, and I think it
failed to quite work for the same reasons. Now, Forrest Gump made 2/3 of a
billion dollars and won the Oscar for Best Picture, so it was certainly a
commercial and critical success.
But looking back at it, does anyone really care about
that movie? If you were asked to describe what Forrest Gump was about, your
response would be something like, “Uh, there’s this mentally disabled guy who
can run fast. And he stumbles his way into the background of a bunch of
important events. And he loves this obnoxious hippie that has contempt for him,
but then she dies of AIDS and gives him a son.”
That’s not a story. That’s just a bunch of stuff that
happens to someone you don’t identify with and only care about in the way you
care about a puppy.
WALL-E is a much better movie than Forrest Gump. Forrest Gump was carried by cutesy
revisionist history, which is far less interesting than the beautifully
desolate fascinating world created in WALL-E. But WALL-E is still just a
non-character stumbling through a series of events.
No matter how interesting those series of events are,
the movie still left me feeling empty.

Steve Friedman has an MFA in screenwriting from USC, and has written ten feature-length screenplays. He blogs regularly at Nifty McNiftington.