I remember when I was about 13 years old still watch this movie every halloween ... the little catchy catch phrases and the little jokes and the invisible jokes ... this movie brings a lot of childhood memories back to me. I still will never get old of this movie...
So, how many syllables are there in that name again?
This is an amazing movie. The magic of the first half is even enough to carry you through the more standard second half.
The film begins on an abandoned planet earth, which is no longer able to sustain life. Human life, that is. In the midst of what appears at first to be merely a haunting, desolate landscape, WALL-E's abundant imagination has been thriving. There are many wonderful surprises that WALL-E finds while processing the mounds of garbage left behind by the human race. Delightfully, the back story of this post-apocalyptic setting is told through garbage, through the items that WALL-E finds, or the ones he passes by. The items that might be significant to us are often passed over by what catches WALL-E's attention, and we are brought to question what we, in turn, value - what catches our eye - what delights us - what holds our curiosity.
At first, the abundance of slapstick moments in this film seemed like standard, flippant, cartoonish fare, but then I remembered one of the comparisons that some reviewers have been making between WALL-E the robot and Charlie Chaplin. There is a vaudevillian flair to the robot's movements and mannerisms. Even the Inspector Clouseau-like moments that you can see coming are rendered so delightfully that they feel like surprises. Over the hundreds of years that WALL-E has spent picking up garbage on the abandoned planet, he has developed an earthiness that puts him in stark contrast to the precision of the machines that he meets later on in the movie.
WALL-E's personality and behavior gravitates between that of a toddler and a young adult. He is both very clever and very innocent. The lenses of his eyes reflect back to us the wonders he helps us to see.
Newspaper article from: Entertainment Newsweekly; 11/7/2008; 1200+ words...Lake, John Leguizamo, Barry Levinson, Blake Lively, Josh Lucas, Wendie Malick, Matthew Modine, The Muppets, KathyNajimy, Paulina Porizkova, Gloria Reuben, Jason Ritter, Stephen Root, Susan Sarandon, Richard Schiff, Tamara Tunie...
Newspaper article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television; 1/1/2006; 1486+ words...1998. Herself, Mad TV , Fox, 1999. Herself, Late Night with Conan O'Brien , NBC, 2000. Intimate Portrait: KathyNajimy (documentary), Lifetime, 2000. The View , ABC, 2001. Herself, The Isaac Mizrahi Show , Oxygen, 2002. Maude...
Newspaper article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television; 1/1/2004; 1168+ words...producer. Formed comedy team with KathyNajimy. Awards, Honors: Obie Award...HBO, 1995. Intimate Portrait: KathyNajimy, Lifetime, 2000. Bo, Absolutely...Television Specials: (With KathyNajimy) The Kathy & Mo Show: Parallel...