Andrew Stanton said the moral of the film was "Irrational love defeats life's programming." In my opinion, this means that people are very used to specific habits and rarely tend to break free of them. Often times, it's because people are afraid to face new things or the changing world. Wall-E's main function is to clean the Earth, even though it is no longer inhabited. He is scared to do anything else, or does not know how. Then EVE comes, who breaks him out of his shell. The name EVE comes from the bible because Stanton said Wall-E reminded him of Adam because he was lonely all the time. There are many different interpretations of Wall-E's character. Hrag Vartanian, a famous writer, said Wall-E is very similar to Butades, a Greek myth. It says that Butades created art to show a Corinthian maiden that he loved her.
The design of this movie was also stellar. Wall-E took 125,000 storyboards to show the entire movie in detail. To create the destroyed Earth, Pixar went to abandoned places like Chernobyl and studied the landscape. Something I found very interesting, was that Stanton found the idea for Wall-E's eyes when he received and odd looking set of binoculars at an Oakland Athletics game. Stanton "missed the entire inning because he was distracted by them." Many people were concerned however, with the similarities between Wall-E and Johnny 5 from Short Circuit.
Wall-E is a fantastic movie and even though there is limited dialogue, there are many lessons to be learned about love, the world and yourselves.
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