Wall-E

In the not too distant future, humans have abandoned Earth because of the amount of rubbish. WALL-E, a compactor with habit of picking up everything he finds interesting, lives alone on the planet with a pet cockroach. He collects a variety of things, from a lightbulb to a VHS. He even has what appears to be the last plant. When an unknown aircraft comes to earth and drops EVE to look for a living organism WALL-E falls in love with her. WALL-E gives her his plant, which makes EVE go into a kind of sleep mode. When the spaceship comes to take EVE back, WALL-E decides to join her. What follows is an adventure onboard the Axiom, where the people of earth have moved to and now move on hovering chairs and get liquid food which they suck up through a straw. Due to laziness, they have become so obese that they are unable to move. Due to hastily given instructions given to it, auto, the autopilot it tries to get rid of the plant which compels WALL-E, EVE, the pilot and some malfunctioning robots to find a way to retrieve the plant and save the earth.

Ssiscool

Wall-E mistake picture

Continuity mistake: When Wall-E presents Eve with the plant, he is facing her directly. When Eve is later viewing the footage from her security camera, Wall-E is shown facing at an angle towards the left of the screen, instead of straight ahead.

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Captain: I don't want to survive. I want to live!

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Wall-E trivia picture

Trivia: WALL-E stands for "Waste Allocation Load Lifter - Earth Class," EVE stands for "Extra Terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator," and M-O stands for "Microbe Obliterator," confirmed in Cineworld Unlimited Magazine.

Ssiscool

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Question: Just a question about the remarkable resemblance to Johnny Five from the Short Circuit films. Is Wall-E intentionally modeled this way or is it just a coincidence they look so alike?

Answer: It certainly wasn't intentional, although the director, Andrew Stanton, has acknowledged that he did see Short Circuit many years ago and agrees that it could well have been a subconscious influence. WALL-E was principally designed with the job that he does in mind - the design brief was to consider WALL-E as an appliance first, what he would need to look like in order to do his job efficiently, then work out how to read emotion into the character after that. Stanton has stated that the chief inspiration for WALL-E's eyes came from a pair of binoculars, which he decided looked happy or sad depending on which way up they were.

Tailkinker

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