Hey! Wait a minute...

Leda T

New member
Were there ever times when, after watching a movie or show, you realize there was something that was left unanswered? For example:

WALL*E- It was a great movie and I loved it, but days after watching it, I realized something. Whatever happened to the other humans? After all, the Axiom wasn't the only ship to leave Earth, there were many others. Did those people ever return to Earth? Or did they continue to stay in space forever? This could have been answered in the credits, but I left before those ended. :shrug:
 
Better question: if all those people spent their entire lives on a spaceship with a constantly regulated temperature and atmosphere and were always free of any type of contaminant I really doubt they would have been able to simply step off the Axion onto a world covered in garbage for centuries where little to no major photosynthesis was present, which would no doubt result in a severe lack of breathable oxygen. I'm shocked they all didn't drop dead mere minutes into stepping off the ship. I'm also curious where the babies aboard the ship came from, considering how hard they tried to show that the humans had no physical contact or any kind. Unmentioned artifcial insemination to keep the human race going perhaps?

These questions hit me the second time I saw the film, but do nothing to hinder my enjoyment of it.
 
""Hercules is supposed to be as strong as ten ordinary men. I don't see why eleven ordinary men never just got together and beat the crap out of him."
Jeremy Hotz"

Oh lawl.
 
In one of the Fleischer shorts, he DID. The two were fighting over Nurse Olive, and Popeye forced the spinach down Bluto's throat, the resulting brusing landing Popeye in Olive's care.
 
Over the Hedge-The animals forgot the wagon in the end.

The Fox and the Hound 2-Would the fair be repaired?

Oliver & Comapny-We never saw Jenny's parents
 
I saw that Hotz quote in action on Just For Laugh on CBC... the man makes it SO hilarious!



Welcome into the folds MWUAHAHAHAHA! :evil:

Yeah I wasted HOURS (including some I should have spent in class :sweat: ) on that site.
 
No kidding. Whoa, the discussion over there has more layers than a Spanish onion. Easy to get sucked in. I better watch it when I visit there or there goes my vacation! :p
 
RE: Wall-E...

Buy n Large CEO. Based on the logo on his podium, did he end up as World President or something?

And didn't the ships get filled with BnL customers? What happened to those too poor to use BnL?:sad:
 
What I want to know is, did each nation have its own Axioms? Because unless global politics radically improved in the 2100s (or unless they put differences aside to survive), I highly doubt certain nations would want to be on the same ship with their sworn enemies.
I thought of the same thing. :ack: I can't imagine these humans physically mating with each other. I just can't. Especially since centuries of sedentary lifestyles would make it practically impossible for them to have enough energy for... that.
 
I'm pretty sure they said that the Buy N Large CEO was the "Global" president. The implication was that mass consumerism was going to accomplish what centuries of war and diplomacy haven't in uniting the entire world under one banner right before burying it in piles of junk nobody needed.

Given the way globalization is rolling out, I can't say that they're completely wrong on that, either.



Well, the people would do whatever the machines and video screens told them to without thinking too hard about it. Plus, the John Ratzenberger and Kathy Najimy characters were engaging in what certainly looked like good old-fashioned courtship rituals once they turned off their video screens.

...

You know what? Artificial insemination. And cloning. That's where the babies came from. Yeah. Move along, nothing to see here ;) :D.

-- Ed
 
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