WALL-E Essays

  • Wall-E Response

    853 Words  | 2 Pages

    Wall-E Essay The film Wall E sends a clear message that devices are taking away our humanity - it was a lack of humanity that destroyed Earth, while Wall E’s human characteristics save Earth. The movie Wall-E is a Pixar Animation film that was directed by Andrew Stanton. The film was made to get people thinking about cleaning up our Earth, because if we don’t, our Earth will turn out like the Earth in Wall-E. The human race left Earth and went into space on a holiday ship called the Axiom.

  • Environmental Themes In Wall-E, By Pixar

    1618 Words  | 4 Pages

    WALL-E is one of Pixar’s best work and is comparable to classics like Toy Story and Finding Nemo. The intriguing story of a robot traveling through space to try and find its true love allows for a great story that both kids and adults alike can enjoy. With its stunning visuals, amazing soundtrack and great sounds, WALL-E engulfs any moviegoer. Even though WALL-E has common themes such as protect the environment and love knows no boundaries, it has won well over 85 awards and millions of hearts. Many

  • Comparing Feed And Disney Pixar's Wall-E

    1581 Words  | 4 Pages

    In M.T Anderson’s, Feed, and the motion picture, Wall-E, multiple parallels show. Feed takes place in a dystopian Earth some 200 years from the present time. Everyone has a machine in the back of the head, called a feed, which allows the user to access the internet or text other friends directly from their head. The omnipotent corporations control what people wear, buy, or learn about. When Titus meets Violet, they engage in a romantic relationship. They struggle to be together as a couple, and eventually

  • Feed by M.T Anderson and Disney Pixar’s Wall-E

    1212 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards” (“Brainy Quotes” 1). While this epitomizes modern time, it also represents M.T. Anderson’s Feed and Pixar’s Wall-E. Feed is a book about a dystopian society influenced by a device, called “feed”, implanted in the brains of the citizens. The author describes a group of regular teenagers that venture to the moon for a spring break vacation of partying and going “in mal”. The main character, Titus, falls for

  • Feed by M.T Anderson and Disney Pixar’s Wall-E

    941 Words  | 2 Pages

    from her. In the end, Titus reunites with Violet as she dies. Titus then deliberates, “Everything Must Go” (Anderson 299). In Pixar’s Wall-E, the story set in a robotized and catastrophic earth, surveys a love story between Wall-E and Eva. Although the movie is without words, none are needed to see the love between Wall-E and Eve. Chasing Eva relentlessly, Wall-E embarks on the AXIOM. After the discovery of the plant, the captain of the AXIOM is mesmerized by the beauty of the earth. Inspired, the

  • The Myths of Technology: The Future of Society as Depicted in The Movie Wall-E

    1118 Words  | 3 Pages

    choices inevitably. Andrew Stanton uses these pros and cons and shows how they affect one’s life in his movie Wall-E. Wall-E focuses on the aspects technology has on humans living in a disposable society and the world around them. Now more than ever education has become a substantial way to gain status quo, but the use of technology is leading to the decrease in this result. The movie Wall-E illustrates the negative relationships humans have with technology in schools resulting in the lack of proper

  • WALL-E

    721 Words  | 2 Pages

    until Earth becomes habitable again. WALL-Es, which are cleaning robots were tasked to perform the clean-up operation. However, the clean-up operation was unsuccessful and the supposed five-year cruise turned into a seven centuries in space, and only a single WALL-E was left. Still, WALL-E continued to perform his tasks, building structures from garbage. One day, he found a healthy plant, placed in the shoe filled with soil, and took it to his trailer. Later, WALL-E met a new robot named EVE deployed

  • Transcendentalism in Wall-e

    1396 Words  | 3 Pages

    movie Wall-e. Wall-e, an Earth loving robot, shows the values of protecting nature and straying away from conformity similar to the beliefs in the works of Emerson and Thoreau. The film Wall-e takes place in the future after mankind has abandoned Earth due to its accumulation of garbage from the all-powerful superstore Buy N Large. Wall-E, the Waste Allocation Load Lifter – Earth Class robot, was sent along with other robots to rid Earth of waste and create a livable condition once again. Wall-e appears

  • Wall-E: The Movie

    761 Words  | 2 Pages

    type, then all things are possible. In the movie Wall-E, even though it is a cartoon and the main characters are robots, the basis of the film is possible. Wall-E is a Pixar film from 2008. In it the main character Wall-E is a robot whose purpose is to gather up all the trash left on earth and compact it. He is all alone except for his friend a cockroach. In the beginning Wall-E just goes about his day doing his job and rummaging through the

  • An Analysis of Anti-technology Themes in The Machine Stops and WALL-E

    1035 Words  | 3 Pages

    took care of al their wants and needs, and ultimately lead to their demise. In Forster’s “The Machine Stops”, he illustrates the need for man to become less dependent on machines and technology for their livelihoods and life in general. In Disney’s “WALL-E” we se many of these themes again. In both cases humans have become so inept at taking care of themselves that the loss of the machine or machines that care for them would be catastrophic and deadly. Humans have invested so much trust and power into

  • 1984 and Wall-e

    1179 Words  | 3 Pages

    On the surface the movies 1984 and Wall-e do not look like they would have very much in common, however if someone was to look deeper into the movies they would see that they have more in common than meets the eye. First, they both try to predict what they believe will happen in the future. 1984 shows a country controlled by a totalitarian government. Wall-e introduces the viewer to a world that is controlled by the company Buy 'n' Large (consumerism). They both show that the two ruling parties

  • Wall-E Consumerism

    878 Words  | 2 Pages

    first 10,000 years of their existence. Each new era of human existence has been brought on by advancements in technology and the need of an individual to survive and advance, which within the past 100 years has entailed money and material. The film “Wall-E” successfully depicts a realistic illustration of how innovations in robotic technology, brought on by mass consumerism, can lead to a society geared towards convenience and laziness, as opposed to progress for the human race. While Idiocracy treats

  • WALL-E Theme

    1118 Words  | 3 Pages

    the google writer. My guidelines have informed me that you are forced to read this essay until the very end. With the earth trashed and spaceship boats launched into space, the movie WALL-E provides many morals, messages, and topics that can teach many lessons to humans who watch. One of the topics presented in WALL-E is technology. One of the themes shown on this topic is how if we overdevelop and overuse Artificial Intelligence than humans will become underdeveloped and lose power and control. There

  • Wall E Consumerism

    1963 Words  | 4 Pages

    The 2008 film Wall-E, directed by Andrew Stanton, portrays the disconnect between humanity and nature, which forces life on Earth to no longer exist. Through excessive consumerism, we can see the disconnect between human relationships with humans and nature throughout the film. In the film Wall-E, viewers get taken through a story of a robot named Wall-E who was left alone on planet Earth to compact trash to aid in the recovery of Earth. Throughout the film, we see scenes of images of a post-apocalyptic

  • Technology in the Movie Wall-E

    915 Words  | 2 Pages

    The movie Wall-E shows a lot of compelling technology such as automatic chairs and holograms, but did you notice the effects this technology had on humanity? When you first see the round, chubby humans in Wall-e, your first instinct was to probably laugh. Once you really think about it, though, that future might soon become ours. Even though most technology is very useful and convenient, our dependence on it can lower our ability to focus, decrease people skills, and decline physical health as depicted

  • Wall-E Gender Roles

    1962 Words  | 4 Pages

    Gender Coding and Relationship Structure in Wall-E Disney Pixar’s Wall-E has a unique concept that makes it ripe for feminist critique. The movie centers around a romance between two robots, Wall-E and EVE. The theme of robots learning to love is nothing new, but such idea are usually platonic, involve humans, or are meant to play around the division between man and machine. In Wall-E, none of these apply. The movie is entirely about the development and dynamic of the romantic relationship. This

  • Hello, Dolly !: Music Analysis

    718 Words  | 2 Pages

    musical, Hello, Dolly!, is combined unexpectedly with extensive beauty of space as WALL-E begins descending into an even more unexpected image of life on Earth. The film could almost be classified as a modern silent film, excepting the small moments of dialogue that become more frequent when the humans are introduced, and this silence focuses the audience visually on the film before them: details aren't pointed out, Wall-E's purpose isn't defined by voice-over narration, and Eve doesn't explain the jump

  • What Is Wall-E Ethical

    599 Words  | 2 Pages

    Essay 1 Wall-E is a movie produced by Pixar depicting Earth being unhabitable by humans and the use of robots to clean, filter, and find life, in the form of something that can photosynthesize, so humans can once again return to the planet. Robot Ethics is quite the opposite in terms of the targeted audience, which is definitely not children, to explain what it would take to make a robot harmless or completely natural in a societal setting. Wall-E implies that robots can learn compassion and formulate

  • Wall-E: Humanity's Irresponsibility

    692 Words  | 2 Pages

    The film WALL-E underlines the environmental issue of humanity’s irresponsibility in caring for Earth. It begins by negatively conveying the planet. Just as the lyrics of Put On Your Sunday Clothes (non-diegetic sound) get to, “Close your eyes and see it glisten, Barnaby,” the Earth is shown: musty and surrounded in haze, using colour symbolism to portray age and lifelessness. The lyrics and the vision of the Earth juxtapose, contrasting the ideas of what was and what is. The haze is actually space

  • Wall-E Movie Analysis

    1126 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the movie Wall-E, it begins by giving an overview of a city that became desolate. There were no signs of life anywhere. Enormous piles of garbage were scattered all around — the product of careless attitudes. A robot, Wall-E, arrived to clean up the damage in the hopes of eventually allowing the humans to live on Earth again (Wall-e). In this movie, the director emphasizes that all the destruction to the world cannot be