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The credit reveals that over time, people and robots worked collectively to restore the Earth, from crops to animals to constructions. The people, having regained their work ethic, also regained their healthy physiques. Wall-E and EVE are shown to nonetheless be collective, as shown in a painting where they are standing by the tree he brought with him, which had grown into a large tree. The plan largely failed, nevertheless, forcing humanity to remain in the house indefinitely.
Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter declared that WALL-E surpassed the achievements of Pixar's earlier eight options and probably their most authentic movie thus far. He said it had the "coronary heart, soul, spirit and romance" of the best silent movies. Honeycutt stated the movie's definitive stroke of brilliance was in using a combination of archive film footage and pc graphics to set off WALL-E's romantic leanings. He praised Burtt's sound design, saying "If there could be such a thing as an aural sleight of hand, this is it." Stanton, who is Christian, named EVE after the Biblical character as an end result of WALL-E's loneliness reminded him of Adam before God created his spouse. Dreher noted EVE's biblical namesake and noticed her directive as an inversion of that story; EVE makes use of the plant to inform humanity to return to Earth and move away from the "false god" of BnL and the lazy lifestyle it provides.