1. The name of the protagonist WALL-E is actually the abbreviation of the initials, namely Waste Allocation Load Lifter -- Earth-Class -- Earth waste distributor. 2. In honor of the 1920s producer Hal Roach and the computer HAL in "2001: A Space Odyssey", WALL-E's pet cockroach in the film was named Hal. 3. The last piece of debris collected by WALL-E as it left the atmosphere was the Soviet Union's Sputnik I satellite, launched in 1957, which was the first artificial satellite to be placed in Earth orbit. 4. When the WALL-E walks in outer space, the stars in the background of the picture sparkle, which is the same as what we humans see on a starry night. This is a visual effect due to the presence of an atmosphere between the observer and the star. Therefore, this phenomenon does not occur in outer space. 5. The 1969 song and dance film "Hello, Dolly!" appeared in the film. , which is director Andrew Stanton's favorite work. 6. Hardly any human language is used in the film, and most of the robot characters are voiced by Ben Belter using mechanical sounds he invented. 7. The film is inextricably linked with Apple: when the WALL-E is fully charged, it will emit the start-up sound of Apple’s Macintosh computer; WALL-E will use the iPod to watch movies every night; the sound of AUTO comes from Apple’s text-to-speech system; The shape of the EVE is inspired by the Apple iMac. 8. The film was dedicated to Pixar animation engineer Justin Wright, who died young of a heart attack at the age of 27. 9. The little pig Hamm from "Toy Story" appeared on the shelf full of Wall-E's treasures. 10. There are many similarities between WALL·E and the robot R2-D2 in the "Star Wars" series. Coincidentally, Ben Bert, who dubbed WALL-E, also dubbed R2-D2.
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