The first 40 minutes or so of Wall-E -- in which barely any dialogue is spoken, and almost no human figures appear on screen -- is a cinematic poem of such wit and beauty that its darker implications may take a while to sink in.Read Full Review »
It works; this is Pixar's most enthralling entertainment since "Nemo."Read Full Review »
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NewsWeek: David Ansen
Once again, the Pixar wizards have pushed the animation envelope in unexpected directions and come up with a winner. Wondrously inventive, funny and poignant, WALL*E is part sci-fi adventure, part cautionary fable, part satire and part love story, which may be the best and most improbable part of all.Read Full Review »
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Village Voice: Robert Wilonsky
A film that's both breathtakingly majestic and heartbreakingly intimate.Read Full Review »
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ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
It whisks you to another world, then makes it every inch our own.Read Full Review »
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Washington Post: John Anderson
The idea that a company in the business of mainstream entertainment would make something as creative, substantial and cautionary as WALL-E has to raise your hopes for humanity.Read Full Review »
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LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
Daring and traditional, groundbreaking and familiar, apocalyptic and sentimental, Wall-E gains strength from embracing contradictions that would destroy other films.Read Full Review »
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ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
You leave WALL-E with a feeling of the rarest kind: that you've just enjoyed a close encounter with an enduring classic.Read Full Review »