The concerning predictions the movie 'Wall-E' was right about

A premonitory story
Andrew 'The Visionary' Stanton
A very realistic dystopian world
He didn't want to be right
Trash and more trash
Overflown with garbage
Unbearable figures
Faces glued to their screens
Inspired by Steve Jobs
In 'Wall-E,' people can't walk
No physical activity
Buy'N'Large
Smartphones, smoothies, and climate change
Deforestation is a reality
'Axiom Mission 1'
Inspired by some of the biggest companies in the world
Companies that allow you to visit the moon
'Wall-E' was right
Where is Wall-E when we need him?
A premonitory story

While 'The Simpsons' is famous for some of its premonitory scenes, there is a movie that has checked all the boxes in terms of foreseeing things. In 2008, the Pixar movie 'Wall-E' predicted very accurately what the future of humanity could look like.

Picture: Pixar

Andrew 'The Visionary' Stanton

Directed by Andrew Stanton and produced by Pixar (Disney), the film depicts a dystopic future that has turned out to be more real than we thought.

A very realistic dystopian world

According to an analysis by Bloomberg, the details portrayed in the society of 'Wall-E' in 2008 are, sadly, very similar to the truth.

He didn't want to be right

As Stanton himself admitted to Bloomberg: "I usually enjoy being right, but not in this instance. I didn't want to be right on so many things in this movie." So, let's see which predictions 'Wall-E' was right about.

Picture: Pixar

Trash and more trash

To begin with, and as shown in the first scenes of the film, Wall-E's work is to compress and put away trash cubes and create high constructions of garbage with them.

Picture: Pixar

Overflown with garbage

In the real world, the planet is overflown with garbage. The countries in charge of handling it are on the edge of collapsing.

Picture: Muhammad Numan / Unsplash

Unbearable figures

In the United States only, each citizen produces 1,704 pounds of garbage per year, as revealed through an investigation by consulting firm Verisk Maplecroft. If we consider the world's entire population, we're talking of an outrageous amount of solid waste.

Picture: John Cameron / Unsplash

Faces glued to their screens

In the movie, the humans that are producing that insane amount of garbage are also constantly glued to their screens. They only interact with other humans online.

Picture: Pixar

Inspired by Steve Jobs

Pixar CEO and technology guru Steve Jobs served as an inspiration for Andrew Stanton's characterization of human interaction with technology. In fact, the film's director had the opportunity to see the iPhone a year before it was launched.

In 'Wall-E,' people can't walk

In the movie, Earth has collapsed and climate change has made the planet inhabitable. Humans are space tourists that only move while sitting in their hoverchairs. There are similarities with present-day real life. More and more, people are relying on their cars, electric bikes, and hoverboards, even to go to the supermarket around the corner.

Picture: Pixar

 

No physical activity

The lack of physical activity, their diet based on smoothies, and the use of hoverchairs cause the people in the movie to suffer from obesity.

Picture: Pixar

Buy'N'Large

Every aspect of the spaceship where humans live is designed to keep them entertained and only consume products from Buy'N'Large, the company that controls everything in the dystopian universe of 'Wall-E'.

Picture: Pixar

Smartphones, smoothies, and climate change

The similarities are scary if we reflect on what is happening in the real world. The planet is suffering the first symptoms of climate change, we spend hours and hours on our smartphones, and meal-substituting smoothies are a trend - a total score for 'Wall-E'.

Picture: Rohit Tandon / Unsplash

Deforestation is a reality

The story of the film begins when 'Wall-E' finds the only plant left on the planet and tries to look for a healthy environment for it to grow. Although the situation is not as critical as in the movie, deforestation is indeed a concerning problem in today's world.

Picture: Pixar

'Axiom Mission 1'

The spaceship that Wall-E gets on in the film is called Axiom. Coincidentally enough (wink, wink), the spacecraft used in the first tourist space journey by SpaceX, Elon Musk's company, was called 'Axiom Mission 1'.

Picture: Pixar

Inspired by some of the biggest companies in the world

But Elon Musk is not the only technology tycoon referenced in the movie. The company that is in control of everything in Wall-E's world, Buy'N'Large, is inspired by Jeff Bezos' Amazon. We can say that the choice of Amazon as an inspiration was a premonitory decision because, when the movie was released in 2008, Amazon wasn't the corporate giant it is now.

Picture: Pixar

Companies that allow you to visit the moon

In the film, Buy'N'Large is the owner of the spaceship Axiom. Just like Musk with his SpaceX, Jeff Bezos owns Blue Origin, a company that offers trips to space for people who have enough money to afford them.

'Wall-E' was right

Despite being labeled as a Pixar masterpiece for children (which it is), the truth is that 'Wall-E' has given us a glimpse of what the future could look like if we don't do something to prevent its worst developments.

Picture: Pixar

Where is Wall-E when we need him?

The good news is that we may still have time to save the planet. The bad news is that Wall-E won't be able to help us fight climate change.

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