"WALL-E's Redemption" by Rosamund M. Gammie
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Author ORCID Identifier

https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0702-7321

Abstract

Inaugurated into the Criterion Collection in 2022 this paper re-examines some of the initial responses to the 2008 Disney-Pixar animated film, WALL-E. The movie received a mixed reception, largely celebrated (but occasionally viewed as “too leftist” by others) for its environmental, anti-capitalist message by many public critics, yet disparaged or dismissed as being superficially empty, shallow, and hollow in academic circles. Labor has been the focus of some academic criticism of the film, particularly as it relates to commoditisation, but this paper recontextualises labor not with capitalism, but with love. By viewing the film through the dynamic of labor and love, larger questions are raised on humanity’s relationship to both. As such, WALL-E the robot exhibits Biblical qualities: his relationship with labor and manual work is reminiscent of Adam, and his relationship with love reflects the salvific dimensions of redemption and sacrifice. Thus WALL-E the film and WALL-E the robot can be viewed Christologically.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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29

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