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WALL.E (2-DISC SPECIAL EDITION)

 ABOUT THE MOVIE

Genre: CG Animation
Starring: Ben Burtt, Fred Willard, Jeff Garlin, Sigourney Weaver, John Ratzenberger, Kathy Najimy
Director: Andrew Stanton
Rating: G
Year Made: 2008

 


 SPECIAL FEATURES

DISC ONE
- BURN.E Hilarious, All-New Animated Short
- PRESTO Amazing Animated Theatrical Short Film
- Deleted Scenes
- Animation Sound Design
- Audio Commentary

DISC TWO
- THE PIXAR STORY By Leslie Iwerks
- Additional Deleted Scenes
- Wall.E Treasures and Trinkets
- BnL Shorts
- "Lots of Bots" Storybook
- Making Of Featurettes

 


 TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

Languages: English/Mandarin/
Cantonese
Subtitles: English/Chinese
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 Widescreen
Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround EX
Running Time: 1 hr 38 mins
Region Code: 3
Distributor: Scorpio East

 

 

SYNOPSIS: 

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.

After hundreds of lonely years of doing what he was built for, the curious and lovable WALL-E discovers a new purpose in life when he meets a sleek search robot named EVE. Join them and a hilarious cast of characters on a fantastic journey across the universe.

Transport yourself to a fascinating new world with Disney-Pixar's latest adventure, now even more astonishing on DVD and loaded with bonus features (including the exclusive animated short film BURN-E). WALL-E is a film your family will want to enjoy over and over again.

MOVIE REVIEW:

A Pixar branded animation can do no wrong. With its ninth full-length feature, it shows that a three dimensional character that omits no dialogue of sorts can touch the hearts of many.

Wall.E which stands for Waste Allocation Load Lifter-Earth-Class is the sole, stranded robot on earth faithfully clearing up the waste left behind by the humans who has since temporarily cruises to space on a gigantic ship called the Axiom. The droid is lonely and eager for some companionship, the only thing keeping him company is the various items he found in the junkyards including an old videotape in which he treasured.

For the first 30 minutes or so, director Andrew Stanton, his team of animators and sound designer Ben Burtt did an amazing feat of introducing the protagonist to the audience with nothing except splendid CG backgrounds and ambient sound effects complimenting the adorable Wall.E.

But the best has yet to come, a love interest in the form of Eve (Extra-terrestial Vegetation Evaluator) shows up and indirectly transport Wall.E to a world that perhaps might be the only possible solution for mankind in future given our current declining environment.

Stanton has stated in interviews that he’s not spreading a message in the movie but the story clearly hints of the disastrous consequences we are heading. The pacing on the other hand never feels sluggish, in fact it gets more hastening as Wall-E and Eve rush to save mankind from destruction while at the same time discover their newfound love towards one another.

The movie has something for everyone in the family, the little kids will be entertained by the breakneck action sequences and various cute robotic characters especially a neurotic one called MO. The adults I’m sure will be in awe by the wondrous CG graphics and the tender innocent love between Wall-E and Eve which adults might find more attuned to.

Technically, Pixar has done it again, increasing the stakes since we last see Nemo and his dad swimming in the vast ocean or Remy scurrying in the kitchen. Besides blow-your-eyes graphics, Pixar always place their stories on the forefront and with a non-human headed storyline (no talking animals too) liked "Wall-E", it successfully manages to pull off a genuinely sweet touching feat, something fellow competitors might find hard to top.

The late Walt Disney always said, "For every laugh, there should be a tear." How true is that with "Wall.E".

SPECIAL FEATURES :

Disc one of the DVD contains the movie plus a slew of features including:

BURN.E – Similar to "Jack Jack Attacks", "Burn.E" is the hilarious new short created for the DVD which details the extended sequence involving the poor repair bot which was trapped outside the Axiom as see in the movie. A 4 stars if not 5 stars short.

PRESTO – The amusing short (as seen in theaters) involving a hungry rabbit and his magician owner. 5 stars for it too.

There are two Deleted Scenes which last almost 5 minutes, "Garbage Airlock" and "Dumped" with a detailed optional intro commentary by Andrew Stanton. Most of the graphics are near to completion and listen to Stanton on why the shots were changed or deleted at the very last minute.

Let the father of modern sound design, Ben Burtt takes you to the whole history of creating commonly heard sound effects in Animation Sound Design: Building Worlds from the Sound Up. A wonderful 18 minutes feature that is particularly of interest to movie geeks and Disney fans.

The DVD is round up with a Audio Commentary by Director Andrew Stanton - A glib talker and passionate filmmaker, Stanton is wonderful to listen to, generously sharing anecdotes on making Wall.E.


Disc Two of the DVD is divided into two chapters, "Humans" (film fans) and "Robots" (families).


"Humans" start with the Lesile Iwerks directed 88 minutes documentary "The Pixar Story". Honest and rich in facts, detailing how the once ailing company comes to making its mark in the history of motion picture.

Disc One has two deleted scenes and here we have two Additional Deleted Scenes. But this time round, the scenes are presented in pre-vis and storyboard forms. Not to say that you got to skip them though as Stanton is here again to explain why.

Making of Featurettes start with The Imperfect Lens: Creating the Look of Wall.E, lasting 14 minutes, a behind-the-scenes feature that shows how visual consultant Roger Deakins was hired by Pixar to advise on creating believable angles and light source for the movie.

Next up is Captain's Log: The Evolution of Humans. The original intention was to have the human characters look like jell-o and blob-like thus this feature explains why it was fine-tuned to the final look in the finished movie.

Famed composer Thomas Newman worked with Andrew Stanton in "Finding Nemo" and here he is seen composing the music for Wall.E in Notes on a Score.

You want to know how much effort or staff is required for a movie that requires almost 1500 shots? Life of a Shot: Deconstructing the Pixar Process is an eye-opening 5 minutes feature which shows you the crews needed behind one specific shot alone.

The numerous robots seen in the background is dissect in Robo-Everything. Surprisingly, the robots were actually built on a modular system similar to Lego bricks.

Wall-E and EVE touches on how our two main protagonists were created. Elbows or not, that’s the dilemma faced by the animators while creating Wall.E.

And here we are at the Robots chapter -

You saw those rib-tickling online shorts featuring Wall.E and his funny antics before the theatrical opening? All of them are complied under Wall.E’s Treasures and Trinkets.

Pixar is so good at shorts and here they are, a series of BnL shorts explaining how the fictional corporation came about.

If you have the penchant for knowing all those different bots shown in the movie, Bot Files gives us a background look at them, a feature which Pixar did for the Blu-Ray release of "Cars".

"Lots of Bots" Read-Along Storybook which will appeal to kids round up Disc Two.

AUDIO/VISUAL:

For a movie that relies heavily on ambient sound effects, the Dolby Digital 5.1 surround is an excellent showcase of Ben Burtt’s skills to entice the audience given the minimal dialogue in the movie. The widescreen 2.39:1 aspect ratio with the flawless visual transfer makes it the perfect DVD for wholesome family entertainment.

MOVIE RATING:



DVD RATING :

Review by Linus Tee

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This review is made possible with the kind support from Scorpio East

 

 



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