WALL·E
- 2008
- Tous publics
- 1h 38min
Dans un avenir lointain, un petit robot collecteur de déchets entreprendra par inadvertance un voyage dans l'espace qui décidera en fin de compte du sort de l'humanité.Dans un avenir lointain, un petit robot collecteur de déchets entreprendra par inadvertance un voyage dans l'espace qui décidera en fin de compte du sort de l'humanité.Dans un avenir lointain, un petit robot collecteur de déchets entreprendra par inadvertance un voyage dans l'espace qui décidera en fin de compte du sort de l'humanité.
- Récompensé par 1 Oscar
- 96 victoires et 95 nominations au total
Elissa Knight
- EVE
- (voix)
Jeff Garlin
- Captain
- (voix)
John Ratzenberger
- John
- (voix)
Kathy Najimy
- Mary
- (voix)
Karleen Griffin
- Mom
- (non crédité)
- …
Kim Kopf
- Hoverchair Mother
- (non crédité)
Niki McElroy
- Pool Mother
- (non crédité)
Garrett Palmer
- Blond Boy in Commercial
- (non crédité)
Lori Richardson
- PR-T
- (non crédité)
- …
Jessica Skelton
- Young Girlfriend
- (non crédité)
Kai Steel Smith
- Brunette Boy in Commercial
- (non crédité)
Michael Toy
- Commercial Human
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe first Pixar film to be nominated for 6 Academy Awards. This ties it with the only other animated film to garner this many nominations: La Belle et la Bête (1991).
- Gaffes(at around 8 mins) WALL·E's cockroach, Hal, sleeps in a "Kremie" (parody of the Hostess Twinkie). Twinkies grow stale and their cream filling evaporates after a few decades, yet Hal's interaction with it betrays it to be the same as a new Twinkie. This is most likely a joke implying that only cockroaches and Twinkies can survive the apocalypse.
- Crédits fousThe Pixar logo at the end has the lamp Luxo Jr's light bulb burn out, so WALL-E enters and replaces the light bulb. But as he leaves he accidentally knocks down the "R" in the logo, and he tries to cover it up by posing like an "R".
- Versions alternativesEnd credits for international versions feature additional dubbing credits footage. It contains animation of WALL·E in the same 8-bit video game graphics style as the original end credits compacting two vertical rows of different objects into cubes of garbage only to have two WALL·A robots collide in the front of the screen, closing the credits.
- ConnexionsEdited into BURN·E (2008)
- Bandes originalesPut On Your Sunday Clothes
Written by Jerry Herman
Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
Performed by Michael Crawford and Danny Lockin
Commentaire à la une
Personal Rating: 10/10 (Outstanding)
I still remember just how impactful this movie was on me when I saw it as a child. The visuals, storytelling, how it made you think. And 12 years later it still stands as one of the best movies Pixar has ever made, and truly a hallmark of animated films.
The start of this movie. I could watch on an indefinite loop. The emotions you feel, the bond that grows between you and a robot in the introductory minutes, is storytelling at it's finest. No words have to be spoken and yet this movie world builds better than most 2-hour-long fantasy movies where the characters don't shut up.
The visuals. The visuals in this movie are stunning, the way they direct the eye, immerse you in the world, make you laugh and make you cry, a huge credit to the artists who worked on this film. And also interestingly enough, to Roger Deakins, who contributed to the first 20 minutes of the film and to the animating team, as he consulted on how to light scenes, he's quoted saying "the natural world that we live in just isn't as well-lit as your typical animated world." So by darkening scenes, adding shadow and cutting the number of lights used, they added a huge layer of realism to WALL-E.
The story, how you learn and feel about the characters (who the majority of are robots), the music, it's all superbly done. I can't think of anything I would change. But all this alone isn't what earns it the 10/10 rating, it's the themes, the tones, the way this "for children" movie makes you think, that earns my full respect.
For the most part, humans choose what's convenient, sacrificing privacy, health, well being, relationships and the like for that. WALL-E showed that exact point like never before. It takes effort to overcome the norm, to work towards a goal, even when it's not rainbows and peaches when one is determined they can do amazing things. Which is why the ending of this movie isn't bleak, it's inspiring. (spoilers) Humans come back to earth because of one lonesome plant. But it's enough to give them hope, and determination, to work on transforming the planet. And that was just one of the themes explored beautifully. I already know I'll be watching this movie again, and again.
Thanks for reading my review.
"I didn't know we had a pool!"
I still remember just how impactful this movie was on me when I saw it as a child. The visuals, storytelling, how it made you think. And 12 years later it still stands as one of the best movies Pixar has ever made, and truly a hallmark of animated films.
The start of this movie. I could watch on an indefinite loop. The emotions you feel, the bond that grows between you and a robot in the introductory minutes, is storytelling at it's finest. No words have to be spoken and yet this movie world builds better than most 2-hour-long fantasy movies where the characters don't shut up.
The visuals. The visuals in this movie are stunning, the way they direct the eye, immerse you in the world, make you laugh and make you cry, a huge credit to the artists who worked on this film. And also interestingly enough, to Roger Deakins, who contributed to the first 20 minutes of the film and to the animating team, as he consulted on how to light scenes, he's quoted saying "the natural world that we live in just isn't as well-lit as your typical animated world." So by darkening scenes, adding shadow and cutting the number of lights used, they added a huge layer of realism to WALL-E.
The story, how you learn and feel about the characters (who the majority of are robots), the music, it's all superbly done. I can't think of anything I would change. But all this alone isn't what earns it the 10/10 rating, it's the themes, the tones, the way this "for children" movie makes you think, that earns my full respect.
For the most part, humans choose what's convenient, sacrificing privacy, health, well being, relationships and the like for that. WALL-E showed that exact point like never before. It takes effort to overcome the norm, to work towards a goal, even when it's not rainbows and peaches when one is determined they can do amazing things. Which is why the ending of this movie isn't bleak, it's inspiring. (spoilers) Humans come back to earth because of one lonesome plant. But it's enough to give them hope, and determination, to work on transforming the planet. And that was just one of the themes explored beautifully. I already know I'll be watching this movie again, and again.
Thanks for reading my review.
"I didn't know we had a pool!"
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 180 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 223 808 164 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 63 087 526 $US
- 29 juin 2008
- Montant brut mondial
- 527 403 656 $US
- Durée1 heure 38 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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