In the Disney-Pixar film Wall-E, the abandoned Earth and detached humans serve as a reflection of our own society’s overconsumption and disregard for environmental responsibility, revealing the unrealistic and dangerous belief that our physical spaces can endlessly absorb our waste. Spatiality is the tool used by the film to show the destruction we produce on Earth through unsustainable patterns of consumption. This research essay analyzes how Wall-E exposes the spatial foundations and consequences of consumerism in the modern world. It considers the role of ecofilms like Wall-E in advocating for personal responsibility and prompting viewers to reduce consumption.
Melody Miller (Fri,) studied this question.
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