The ending made me fell........starving

So, basically, you were left wanting more, correct? That’s a good thing, in my opinion! A movie that leaves you wanting more is a success as far as I’m concerned.

well… i havent seen that in that way… however there is still a hole in my heart, and my stomach that is waiting to be filled… still hoping some pixar animator reads this…

PS: A movie that lets you wanting more is the first step for a secuel… but there is no posibility for a secuel because all the problems were solved and there is no more posible argument

Did you stay for the credits, by any chance? There’s a great sequence where we see how Earth was rebuilt and we see all the robots helping out, as well as WALL-E, EVE, and what finally became of the plant.

They’re producing various Pixar comics which will hopefully fill some need for more Wall-E.

Yes! So looking forward to those comics. The should have some after stories.

The movie left me wanting more too. That’s not a bad thing. The best writing does that.

i did actualy stayed for the credits, ever after them, thats what i meant about [spoil] the tree of life… the one that apears next to wall-e and eve at the end of the “recontruction of earth” part [/spoil]
i will be looking forward for the comics, hope they keep the “esence” or more called “feel” of the movie.

PS[spoil]: the recontruction of earth part was awsome, going from stone age to present and then to 60´s pixelated style , the music, was a part to remember… but it could be longer, i think it was too short… just my thoughts [/spoil]

I sort of see what you mean, Billow. If I had to criticise WALL-E, the only thing I could say is that the ending did feel a little rushed. I think Pixar did the right thing by [spoil]having WALL-E’s memory return, since a sad ending would’ve just made the film too depressing overall. But yes, it was very ‘happily ever after’. I think they solved the problem a little by using the credits, as you said, but making the film longer overall would’ve potential bored audiences, especially as a good chunk of the audience would’ve been children.[/spoil]

I’m sure if Pixar had their way, they’d have three hour long films, and that would definitely satisfy us Pixar fans! But I guess they’ve got to be realistic. Hopefully the comics will extend the story moreso, since it seems that a lot of people are desperate for more WALL-E.

And welcome to the forums, Billow! :smiley:

Starving for more is always good. :wink:

Exactly what I’m saying.

And I didn’t feel the ending was rushed at all. In fact it ended at exactly the right moment, and didn’t drag things out, that’s yet another thing I love about it.

yeah, i have to agree with lizardgirl, i think that the ending was too rushed, i dont think is a bad ending [spoil] i almost cryed when wall-e recover his memory… seriusly…[/spoil]
[spoil]but i still think they could show us more, i was specting the credit part to be 8-15 minutes minimun, and the children would just run away if they became more, usualy pixar films gives us a “complete” after credits scene, like in the incredibles, the comic style credits were awsome, just hoping they release the comics… at least online.[/spoil]

PS: im making a papercraf of wall-e (this one is fairly complicated, not for children)about the .[spoil]first kiss [/spoil]and im looking if there is an artist, 3d modeler or with experience in papercraft to help me, i will post a post soon with the details

Agreeing with Midgrad. At first thought, the ending could be seen as rushed, but the credits just turned into into a BEAUTIFUL ending. Yes, it’s not the conventional wrap up. This is not the conventional movie. And if you look at the credits hard enough, there’s a lot said from just that.

For example, between how big the tree is and how the art periods go on a timeline (sped up a bit with more technology, I’m sure) the final part of the colored credits before we go to 8 bit looks about 500-1000 years after the movie. And there WALL-E and EVE are, still in love. If you ask me, that says more than any conventional wrap up could.

I agree. The ending made me want so much more of Wall-E and EVE.
But, it was a really good ending. I still enjoyed it.
Although I wish they would have had an outtake reel OR a home video with Wall-E and EVE taken by someone on the Axiom

[spoil]No, I wouldn’t say that long. More 100-600.[/spoil]

I thought WALL-E ended perfectly with the way it was. WALL-E and Eve finally got love to each other and a life on Earth together with humans, humans coming back to Earth and the world will become a better place as they rebuild civilization - what more could you want? I don’t think after that scene, a quick and random sequence of WALL-E vacuuming his house or something before credits drop in would leave audiences satisfied.

I felt the same exact way, that’s why I made a post for a sequel :smiley:

Yeah, i also thought that [spoil]Wall-e was dead at the end[/spoil]. I couldn´t believe that Pixar could do that. Well, at least the movie ended well. [spoil]Thanks goodness Eve revived him.[/spoil]

I think the ending was perfect, and there is no need for a sequel.

I liked the end. I cried :smiley: I love it when cartoons make me cry…

Ditto!

As much as I would like to see a WALL·E sequel, I think I would enjoy it more if they decided to carry on the series through short OVAs, like Cars Toons and Toy Story toons. They could even focus more on the secondary characters, like M-O or VAQ-M through that too!

I had an idea for a sequel when i came upon a article about Andrew Stanton not really charging up for a sequel, because at the end it offered something about making your own creative story and “maybe stanton will reconsider!”, so while on a walk of thoughts, i came up with something like this:

NOTE: i just got the dramatic parts of the film, i’m not really into actually describing every idea i panned up!

Ok, lets see, the plot takes place 7 years after the events of the first (enough time to fully diverse the life shown in the end credits), as described in the end credits, everybody regained their bone structure and loss all that morbid weight, Wall-E and EVE finally reconcile in the very same warehouse that Wall-E keeps all of his valuables, somewhat untouched, and the children of the new Earth all gather around to tell the story about the plant that had brought them back there in the first place, as well as how Wall-E had successfully, yet accidentally, assisted in this quest. Although everything does seem apparently successful in the rehabilitation as well as the functionality of life on earth, some people repress about a missing government as well as a economy in this newly created Earth. They gather in meetings, offering to rekindle the once organized BnL corporation. Some did seem to argue, but as things get progressively more complex inside their Earth, they went into desperation and went along with the plan. One random person suggests their first plan of action into reworking the BnL corporation is to suggest rebooting AUTO’s power for any suggestions into their course (they didn’t know the true story behind AUTO, so they still suspect that he was decommissioned because of the lack of his duty once everybody had fleeted back home.). The people feel anxious to do it, and organize the plan into course (without the captain’s consent). Also, another problem arises in Wall-E and EVE’s relationship, as a conversation between the Captain and EVE sparks even more curiosity in the Captain’s understanding of history and traces the data in the infosphere as far back as when OPERATION: Cleanup Began. EVE takes notice of this, and finds out that there were many other Wall-E’s before the one she dearly knew. This had surprised her so much that she began becoming estranged towards Wall-E, and ironically, Wall-E felt the same way in retrospect.
When Wall-E and M-O continue helping others move into earth (due in part to the Captain’s intergalactic messaging towards the other fleets which had sent them over here), Wall-E takes final notice of the other EVE probes before him, which, like EVE, Wall-E becomes very estranged from EVE. As this vice versa issue heads on board, the two ignore each other awkwardly and soon drift from each other, still worried about what they had found out. After a few days of finalizing the plan, two crewmembers head into the Axiom and deactivate the “manual auto” button on AUTO and AUTO is charged back with his returning “no” 7 years back. AUTO is stupefied by his long stasis, and the crewmembers give all the info on what happened to him since the past 7 years. They offer him the job of reincarnating BnL, but his intentions are not so. AUTO tricks the crewmembers into thinking he wants to be part of the BnL corporation, and insists that the only way of bringing back the megaconglomerate corporation is to “Auto-reactivate” the robots originally stationed for the Axiom (practically, bringing all the robots to his every will, hence the AUTO part). The crewmembers gullibly take into this, but unfortunately take it back too late. All the robots, EVE, M-O, even BURN-E are reprogrammed to AUTO’s duties, and his main duties are to return everyone, including the other fleets, back to space (despite the flourishing Earth). All the robots act ruthlessly to usher all the crewmembers back into the Axiom. Knowing that the crewmembers cannot fight back by the innumerable force that the robots have. Only Wall-E, Hal, Captain McCreas and the other crewmembers are the only allies. During this matter, while Wall-E and M-O are continuing searching for Wall-E’s attended knick knacks, once AUTO “auto-reactivates” the robots, M-O attacks Wall-E by violently “cleaning” him. Wall-E only sees this as a annoyance and urges him to stop. When M-O does not stop, Wall-E attempts to ignore M-O and continue his duties away from him.

That’s about all i’m giving.