This isn’t really MY theory, but I do think what caused the “rising toxicity levels” that made life unsustainable was when they (after delaying for many years at the advice of their “top B&L scientists”) finally activated the giant incinerators. You can see what appears to be smoke in the final transmission, and it would explain why he’s on oxygen and literally choking to death. The sheer volume of the acrid smoke created by burning that amount of garbage destroyed virtually every ecosystem on earth, kind of akin to a “second ice age”. That or I’m once again over-analyzing the hell out of an animated movie for kids.
The small detail of the captains' signatures gradually being made with less effort... really, this storyboard overall is great for seeing both cut ideas and putting into perspective the things that were kept.
I always thought WALL-E was one of the scariest movies I have always seen. So many dystopian stories, even many that are far more violent and graphic, have never effected me the way WALL-E did.
I really like the grim nature of this storyboard. Ofc they had to tone it down for the final cut, but it's very interesting. And while storyboard Otto looks badass, him being a part of the ship made him more menacing by making him more like HAL
There needs to be a movie that takes place 700 years before WALL-E and it shows how the garbage built up and how the Axiom and WALL-E’s were built and the eventual evacuation of Earth. But it focuses on an older man who refuses to leave.
If Wall-E turned out like this it would've been one of those films that you saw once when you were 7 and then remembered it 10 years later like "oh yeah that existed"
The CEO's(William Shatner) last words, while of course was always a part of the plot for the captain in the release, is certainly also a reference to the part where Captain Kirk's evil half cried those words at the last part of the "Enemy Within" episode of the first Star Trek series.
I’m surprised that no one else, far as I’ve seen, has said anything about the fact that there’s supposed to be a whole fleet of space ships. The Axiom or however it’s spelled, is just the head ship. So, what happened to the rest? Did they all die or sum
Where Did U Find That Storyboard Sequence?
Honestly.. I like the humans as blobs. I think it’s a very creative way to show how vulnerable and helpless we’ve become
The final transmission sounds more desperate and scarier than the one in the film
That scene explaining Code A113 was pretty scarier than the one in the movie.
Auto looks way more Terrifying
This seems like a way more darker story then what it eventually became. I appreciate this version but will always love the one we got.
This isn’t really MY theory, but I do think what caused the “rising toxicity levels” that made life unsustainable was when they (after delaying for many years at the advice of their “top B&L scientists”) finally activated the giant incinerators. You can see what appears to be smoke in the final transmission, and it would explain why he’s on oxygen and literally choking to death. The sheer volume of the acrid smoke created by burning that amount of garbage destroyed virtually every ecosystem on earth, kind of akin to a “second ice age”. That or I’m once again over-analyzing the hell out of an animated movie for kids.
Hahaha A113's eyes falling down was unexpected and very funny. Glad I saw that despite it not making it to the final piece.
The small detail of the captains' signatures gradually being made with less effort... really, this storyboard overall is great for seeing both cut ideas and putting into perspective the things that were kept.
Dude is the BnL ceo screaming I wanna live at the end of the transmission 💀
I find it adorable that Wall-e and M-o became friends in the beginning,and that M-o helped him get to Eve
I always thought WALL-E was one of the scariest movies I have always seen. So many dystopian stories, even many that are far more violent and graphic, have never effected me the way WALL-E did.
I really like the grim nature of this storyboard. Ofc they had to tone it down for the final cut, but it's very interesting. And while storyboard Otto looks badass, him being a part of the ship made him more menacing by making him more like HAL
There needs to be a movie that takes place 700 years before WALL-E and it shows how the garbage built up and how the Axiom and WALL-E’s were built and the eventual evacuation of Earth. But it focuses on an older man who refuses to leave.
Is no one gonna mention how in
If Wall-E turned out like this it would've been one of those films that you saw once when you were 7 and then remembered it 10 years later like "oh yeah that existed"
I never realised but final movie cut was pretty positive and generous about how to represent a toxic inhabitable contaminated earth
The CEO's(William Shatner) last words, while of course was always a part of the plot for the captain in the release, is certainly also a reference to the part where Captain Kirk's evil half cried those words at the last part of the "Enemy Within" episode of the first Star Trek series.
I’m surprised that no one else, far as I’ve seen, has said anything about the fact that there’s supposed to be a whole fleet of space ships. The Axiom or however it’s spelled, is just the head ship. So, what happened to the rest? Did they all die or sum
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