<p>I have to say I love and probably always will love Pixar movies.</p>
<p>I liked WALL-E a lot.
Like, a lot. A surprising amount. I went in reluctantly, and based on my feelings of past Pixar movies, I expected this to be boring. But it was actually really good. AND CUTE~!</p>
<p>The Pixar movies I usually see are 'meh' in my opinion, but I seriously came out of WALL-E aww-ing and being really attached to animated characters. Even like 30 minutes into the movie I was strangely attached to them.
The subplot was a bit argh for me, but I thought they did really well for a G movie of that kind.</p>
<p>Wall-e is one of the worst movies I have ever seen.</p>
<p>I guess I could understand how one might dislike this movie since it's different from the norm in terms of kiddie/Pixar movies, but me and all of my robot-loving friends absolutely LOVED Wall-E. I sat there amazed with all of the details the machines featured in the movie. The underlying message was just another plus. Definitely one of my favorites.</p>
<p>**Wall-E was perhaps the best movie of this year.</p>
<p>For those of you who wanted a comedy movie, that's not what this was about. This was the first Pixar movie that wasn't primarily geared toward a child audience, but rather, a more sophisticated one.</p>
<p>A thought for you guys: WALL-E thinks the best of basic human nature...and the worst of structured human nature. Structured, developed, modern humanity is responsible for every single ill of the film. The polluted and destroyed Earth. The conglomerate of business and government. Thought-controlling social structuring. All of these are extreme examples of "developed" human nature. Comparably, basic human nature is seen as innocent and willing to learn, and at its worst merely naive and malleable. The humans on the Axiom are basic in their humanity; they're practically infants. They don't willingly act lazy. They just don't know anything else in their lives thanks to previously-created structures. Consider when Mary loses her HUD screen and begins to take in the world around her, as if the idea of looking around had never occurred to her before. This equally applies to the robots, with WALL-E and EVE both triumphing over their established programming to revert to basic truths like curiosity and affection.</p>
<p>This conflict of basic vs. structured human nature is what explains two of the previously-discussed issues of the film: the presence of a villainous Autopilot and the involvement of live actors for the humans of the past. The Autopilot is the embodiment of that meaningless structure, an intelligence that seeks to destroy/cover-up anything that would deviate from its established persona and goals. He's the living example of a command to stay asleep. He is the last and greatest remnant of structured humanity. And the live actors? They also are structured humanity, a bit more nuanced and false in their smiles and baloney. Whereas the humans of the future are animated, and in that animation they gain a greater infantile level of expression to them, as if just waking up from a dream. (Then consider how the end credits get more detailed and graphic in design as the humans begin to cultivate the land.) Hopefully that explains some of these grievances.</p>
<p>Among these themes you integrate beautiful cinematography--particularly the first forty minutes--and you find yourself immersed in one of the most impacting movies of the year. The emotion elicited from pure visual performance and music astounds one, especially when watching the movie a second time to really appreciate how it's devoid of true dialogue in the pivotal points.</p>
<p>And to whoever said Wanted was a better movie, what a laughable ludacris comment. That movie basically mashed all 3 matrix movies into one, threw in Star Wars, and wrapped everything around a punk theme. **</p>
<p>Just my .02</p>
<p>Wall-E is good but not great
Hancock is funny
Wanted - still really really want to see</p>
<p>Wall E is the first movie that made my whole family walk out. It was terrible, boring. We asked and received a refund after enduring 40 long minutes.</p>
<p>I've talked to people about WALL-E in real-life. The people who dislike the movie just happen to be fat and lazy. What a coincidence.</p>
<p>Wall-E was watchable but rather boring. The first hour or so no one talked! I wouldn't buy it on DVD.</p>
<p>Best Pixar movie is "Finding Nemo"</p>