If BURN-E (a welding robot) had known how much trouble he'd be caused by WALL-E's pursuit of EVE, then he'd have taken the day off.If BURN-E (a welding robot) had known how much trouble he'd be caused by WALL-E's pursuit of EVE, then he'd have taken the day off.If BURN-E (a welding robot) had known how much trouble he'd be caused by WALL-E's pursuit of EVE, then he'd have taken the day off.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Angus MacLane
- BURN-E
- (voice)
Featured reviews
Having absolutely loved WALL-E, I was all for seeing the short film that came with it. Burn-E is just as good as the movie it featured with, and while not quite in the same league as Geri's Game, Knick Knack, Jack-Jack Attack, Presto and One Man Band, it is one of Pixar's better short films to me. The animation with beautiful colours and atmospheric backgrounds is amazing, the music is haunting and understated and the story has an enchanting atmosphere to it. Burn-E may be a one-joke short, but seeing as the joke itself is funny, it works brilliantly. Burn-E, like WALL-E, is not just endearing but there is a very human side to him which makes us identify with him all the more. In conclusion, beautifully animated and enchanting, this is a great short film and perhaps one of the better one-joke animations I've seen. 9/10 Bethany Cox
While Wall-E is chasing Eve around the space ship, as told in the Pixar movie of that title, what else is going on? That's a big ship, filled not only with enormous, lazy humans, but lots of robots working hard to make them happy and to keep the place running. This short subject form Pixar tells the story of Burn-E, a welding robot aboard that ship, who has to deal with all the problems that Wall-E creates.
Well, he has to try, anyway, because that's his job. He's assiduous about doing his job, even when it becomes impossible.
Animated in the same style as the feature, this excellent short cartoon first saw light as an extra on the DVD release of WALL-E.
Well, he has to try, anyway, because that's his job. He's assiduous about doing his job, even when it becomes impossible.
Animated in the same style as the feature, this excellent short cartoon first saw light as an extra on the DVD release of WALL-E.
Like Wall-E, Burn-E has his flaws. Robots should be capable of repetitious acts that they do flawlessly, but they are also the product of human development. What is cool here is an almost human persistence as Burn-E continues to try and try again. I don't know that any new ground was covered. It was fine.
It's 2805 A.D. Humanity had launched itself into space on the spaceship Axiom leaving behind a mess on Earth to be cleaned up by robots before the people return. A small meteorite hits a lighting spire outside of the ship. BURN-E is a repair robot and sent to replace the spire. However, things keep going wrong. Not the least of which, WALL-E's pursuit of EVE is interfering and the ship lands back on Earth. Nevertheless, BURN-E is programmed to repair the damage no matter what. This is a nice companion piece to WALL-E but not much more than that as a stand-alone. It interacts with the story tangentially. The comedy is light fun. It's nice to see but only after watching WALL-E.
Poor Burn-E He just wanted to fix the Light from the Ship It keeps Failed all the time. I laugh about it! This was a COMEDY MASTERPIECE!
Did you know
- Trivia"BURN-E" stands for Basic Utility Repair Nano Engineer.
- GoofsAt the beginning, a tiny meteor is shown to be the initial cause of the mayhem, flaming as it comes in. This would not happen in outer space, as the flaming is caused by the friction between material and an atmosphere, it would look like just a rock. At supersonic speed.
- Crazy creditsAfter the credits end, SUPPLY-R taps BURN-E on the shoulder and comforts him with "There, there".
- ConnectionsEdited from WALL·E (2008)
- SoundtracksSymphony No. 9 in D Minor, Op. 125 (Ode to Joy)
(uncredited)
Written by Ludwig van Beethoven
Performed by Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Details
- Runtime
- 8m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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