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Blu-ray review: Wall-E

Wall-E Bl- RayI must admit that I’ve seen Wall-E before. In fact the movie was the first film both my kids saw at the cinema. It made quite an impression on Evan in particular. When we were watching Hannah Montana at the pictures the other week Evan kept asking indignantly when Wall-E was going to show up. To be honest I had a fair bit of sympathy for his protestations myself.

So, just in case you aren’t familiar with the plot, it concerns a lonely little garbage compactor robot left all alone on a polluted and desolate earth that has been abandoned by a consumerist and wasteful humanity. A probe droid, EVE, turns up looking for signs of life. Wall-E falls in love with her and follows her back into space.

It’s a good film. In fact it’s a great film, certainly amongst the best animated features that I’ve ever seen. It’s funny, engaging, innocent, and satirical all at the same time. But most of all it’s incredibly brave. Brave to spend the first 40 minutes or so with no dialogue at all, relying on body language, emotive beeping, and the pure skill of the animators in order to communicate what’s going on. And also brave to completely discard the convention of getting big name actors to do the voices. And as a result the movie comes across not just as a 98 minute advert for merchandising like so many animated films these days, but as a piece of lovingly executed art.

In short, I like it. I like it a lot.

And what’s more I like the Blu-ray format too. When we first got the player Kerry and I rented the Incredible Hulk just so we could put it through its paces. While we were impressed with the picture quality it didn’t really move any mountains for us.

But Wall-E on Blu-ray? Wow.

To say the picture was crisp would be an understatement. It’s so sharp that you could cut yourself on it. The scene where Wall-E and EVE are dancing in space made me come out in goosebumps just like it did in the cinema. It was beautiful; there’s just no other word to describe it. It’s obvious to me that Pixar and Blu-ray are pretty much made for each other, and I’m really looking forward to seeing how the relationship between the two develops. The trailer alone for the forthcoming film Up was awe inspiring (those balloons look fantastic).

The features were pretty impressive too. Much more extensive than your average DVD. Of particular merit was a bonus exclusive blu-ray short cartoon called Burn-E, which is a story of a maintenance druid that takes place in and around the various scenes of the mean feature. Both Kerry and I found ourselves laughing out loud at it, and we’re generally a family that keeps our chuckles to ourselves. There were also games, commentaries, a documentary on the history of Pixar, 3-D set fly throughs, deleted scenes and all manner of other goodies. Not bad for about fifteen quid.

You can buy Wall-E at Amazon.co.uk here. Amazon also do a pretty good range of Blu-ray players too.

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11 Comments on “Blu-ray review: Wall-E”

  1. #1 Arjan
    on May 25th, 2009 at 4:28 pm

    I don’t have a television worthy of a blue-ray player, but I díd like Wall-E!

    Arjans last blog post..Walchsee: training and having fun

    Reply

  2. #2 Xbox4NappyRash
    on May 25th, 2009 at 6:26 pm

    Blue-ray whoring aside, is it really that good?

    I likes me some ‘toons.

    Xbox4NappyRashs last blog post..Eeny, meeny, miny moe

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  3. #3 gail
    on May 25th, 2009 at 8:21 pm

    I totally agree with you Dan. Wall-E is fantastic in Blu-Ray. If they had them you’d be able to see their nasal hairs!

    I’m waiting to see ‘Up’ too. It’s a lot like Monster House by the looks of it – and that’s another good one on Blu-Ray.

    Pixar films are great quality on an old fashioned tv but perfect on HD/Blu ray.

    gails last blog post..Butterflies as Big as Elephants.

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  4. #4 Simon
    on May 25th, 2009 at 8:28 pm

    I remember the first DVD that really impressed me was A Bug’s Life, another Pixar film. It was also the first DVD (I think) with a purely digital production cycle. At no point did it exist as film, and therefore suffered no loss in quality from the pristine digital original in Pixar’s servers. Wall-E must look incredible for the same reason.

    Simons last blog post..How it Works: The Baby

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  5. #5 Matt
    on May 25th, 2009 at 8:48 pm

    “Blue-ray whoring aside, is it really that good?

    I likes me some ‘toons.”

    WALL-E is by far the best film of 2008 and one of the best animated films ever. In short, it’s really that good.

    Reply

  6. #6 Ed (zoesdad)
    on May 26th, 2009 at 2:09 am

    I don’t get it–is Blue-ray really significantly better than a regular DVD? I mean could you actually tell the difference in a blind test? (Well, not literally blind as then you really couldn’t see anything, could you?)

    Ed (zoesdad)s last blog post..Playground Rule #1—No Bullies Allowed

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  7. #7 dadwhowrites
    on May 26th, 2009 at 10:15 pm

    Actually, I bought a LCD TV purely to watch Wall-E. Interestingly, I was tempted by Blu-Ray but the Richer-Sounds guy reckoned that it didn’t provide more than an incremental improvement on an upscaling DVD player if (as we have) you’re watching on a 32″ screen. So on upscaling DVD on our shiny new flatscreen it really did look amazing – I’d no idea the bug was so detailed.

    And the story was wonderful – I’ve never seen an animation like it. Well, not until dudelet and I saw Coraline today which utterly restored my faith in all forms of art at a stroke.

    dadwhowritess last blog post..Is he naughty or is he five?

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  8. #8 Kevin Spencer
    on May 26th, 2009 at 11:02 pm

    Hmm. Have never seen Wall-E and I don’t own a Blu-Ray player. So in the time it took for me to read your review, I may now be buying both. Maybe. Or, er, not. Well, time will tell won’t it?

    Kevin Spencers last blog post..Receipts

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  9. #9 Dan
    on May 27th, 2009 at 12:01 am

    Arjan – It is good isn’t it.

    Xbox – Yes, it really is that good. I am planning on being completely honest with these reviews I promise. You’ll see when I come to something that I’m not so keen on.

    Gail – We saw monster house the other day, scared me and kerry witless. God knows what it would do to the kids. Was good though.

    Simon – It probably has a lot to do with it. Certainly the more live action films we’ve seen on blue ray haven’t had as much punch.

    Matt – Not that you’re biased or anything :)

    Ed – In the case of Wall-E, completely better. much sharper, it’s like watchig a moving photo rather than a TV screen. In other films I’ve seen it is better, but not as awe inspiringly so. I’ll post more on this shortly.

    dadwhowrites – I dunno, but I magine he may be right. blue ray would really come into it’s own on huge massive TV’s where you can see the degradation of a “normal” picture due to the size. Evan and i saw coroline too, it was very good indeed. I have a post about that within me too, if i ever get time to write it.

    Kevin – of the two, choose wall-e. it would be cheaper anyhow:)

    Reply

  10. #10 Holmes
    on Jun 5th, 2009 at 3:30 pm

    We have WALL-E on blu-ray as well. I’m constantly awed by how gorgeous it is just to look at, not to mention what a great story it is. Even the closing credits are beautiful!

    Holmess last blog post..Tough Guy

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  11. #11 Dan
    on Jun 5th, 2009 at 7:05 pm

    Holmes – Yes, the closing credits are something special. I only wish I had a bigger TV to watch it on as I’m sure it would be even more impressive.

    Reply

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