The Flick-Off is a new series in which we give a quick–but smart–rip to movies that tick us off.
I know, right: a rebuke of a Disney/Pixar cartoon? About robots? Yes–and it deserves it.
While the beginning of WALL-E is a lovely silent film (and would’ve been a fantastic short film), when you brush away the artifice and the adorable little robots, all you have is standard Disney fare: a male protagonist and a female helper, told from his perspective. Why the robots are gendered at all isn’t clear; the movie could’ve been about their friendship–and far more progressive than the heteronormative romance that ensues.
EVE is sleek and lovely, and is physically able to do things WALL-E cannot, but she’s part of an army of task-oriented robots. The mere push of a button shuts her down, and she lacks the self-protectionist drive that WALL-E exhibits when his power reserve drains. He is, of course, beholden to no one since the humans left Earth; he is autonomous and self-sufficient. EVE, on the other hand, is fully robotic: she’s a badass, complete with gun, and she’s more intelligent and cunning than WALL-E, but she’s been programmed to be that way. She’s an advanced form of technology, but she needs WALL-E to liberate her.
WALL-E, it seems, has developed human qualities on his own. He is also capable of keeping up with a robot approximately 700 years newer (read: younger) than he is–an impressive age gap in any relationship. EVE worries over WALL-E and caters to his physical limitations (he is, after all, an old man–with childlike curiosity), acting as nursemaid in addition to all-around badass. Who says we can’t be everything, ladies? While EVE doesn’t have any of the conventional trappings of femininity, she’s a lovely modern contraption with clean lines, while WALL-E is clunky, schlubby, and falling apart (not to mention he’s a clean rip-off of Short Circuit‘s Johnny 5)–reinforcing the (male) appreciation of a certain kind of female aesthetic, while reminding girls that they should look good and not worry too much about the appearance of their male love-interest.
Pixar, by the way, hasn’t created a female protagonist yet.
More contrary opinions about WALL-E–including the troubling way it portrays obesity–on:
If you know of some other good discussions on the film, leave your links in the comments.
THANK YOU
I remember sitting in the audience at the movie theater between when Eve was first introduced and when she first spoke and gave her name going “Please don’t let it be a girl please don’t let it be a girl” because obviously robots don’t have gender and I was hoping Pixar wouldn’t feel the need to give them one.
Granted, if Pixar would never consider a female granny robot as a good mate if their ages were reversed, pretty sexist, but Wall-e had 700 years more than Eve to develop a human angle, what with his exposure to products of the civilization. Eve on the other other hand was brand spanking new and would have taken time to assimilate human qualities.
Huh, i personally loved Wall-e.I can’t really refute your points, but i can’t bring myself to hate it.