Wall-E: The importance of sound in animation The purpose of this article is to examine the importance of sound in movies, especially animated Wall-E (2008) and how the sound interacts with the robot Wall-E It is to research whether it helps. In this article we will focus on the work of sound designer Ben Burtt and his discussion on the process of creating a world trusted by this movie. Through research of Uncanny's theory, we will try to understand how we act as a viewer to respond to robot characters on the screen.
WALL-E is an animated Disney Pixar movie about the future of our planet Earth. The opening ceremony is a futuristic reality and our planet becomes a landfill covered with waste. WALL-E is a robot designed to eliminate human confusion and pollution in the past few decades. Films are not only children-friendly but also criticisms of today's society. The movie strictly focuses on his love for robot WALL-E and high-tech robot Eve, but the audience
Wall-E: The importance of sound in animation The purpose of this article is to examine the importance of sound in movies, especially animated Wall-E (2008) and how the sound interacts with the robot Wall-E It is to research whether it helps. In this article we will focus on the work of sound designer Ben Burtt and his discussion on the process of creating a world trusted by this movie. - Most of these sources focus on past animation styles and lead to today's animation style. Related articles are "Anatomy Bambi: Multiplane Photography, Cell Technology and Flowering of Complete Animation", "Animation Quadruped Walking: Method and Application", and "Interview with Jeff Mallet of Swab Pictures".
Watching Pixar's animated film "WALL-E" not only shows the amount necessary to make a great movie but also shows various ideas, so it must be humble experience for other filmmakers. "WALL - E" supervised by Stanton and John Reardon by Andrew Stanton has cute and stumbling tremor in other animated films. But this is also a tragic and nostalgic work. In the ruins of the great city of America, WALL-E, a robotic garbage collector and compactor, continues to play its role even after humans have been blown away by the toxic dust waves that are rolling. Only with friends, the WALL-E troll remained in the fragment of the fading culture; the garbage he found was attractive to him. He insisted on the use of plastic forks, wheel hub covers, Zippo lighters and abandoned the diamond ring while keeping the felt box (he likes containers). He lives in a steel dump, once a house, an arcade, an archaeological museum, and a church.