Wall-E Movie Reviews
4.0
Rajeev Masand | ibnlive.com
Not since ET can I remember a non-human protagonist this adorable. Set 700 years after humans abandoned the Earth, Wall-E is the story of the last robot on Earth who has been cleaning up the deserted planet, molding scrap metal into bricksRead full review4.0
Elvis D'Silva | rediff.com
The planet Earth, nearly 800 years in the future, as imagined by the wizards at Pixar, will be little more than a garbage dump. Early images of fog-curtained mountains and cloud-reaching skyscrapers, which are actually stacks of garbage piled highRead full review3.5
A. O. Scott (NYTNS) | The Telegraph
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 review3.5
Nikhat Kazmi | Times of India
NOW this one's a powerful warning to mankind, even as it is perfectly entertaining cinema. It's the 22nd century. Planet Earth has been reduced to a wasteland where there are only mounds of rubbish being regurgitated into kachra skyscrapers by the sole inhabitantRead full review3.0
Johnson Thomas | DNA India
Wall-e, an ecological parable, is essentially a computer generated vision of earth —post apocalypse. The opening sequence of Wall-e is exquisitely rendered; a desolate browned-out landscape teeming with skyscrapers of waste but bereft of human lifeRead full review