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WALL-E heads to the chamber and struggles to keep it open. Captain McCrea manages to disable AUTO and straighten the ship while EVE inserts the plant to activate the hyperjump, freeing a partly damaged WALL-E. Having arrived back on Earth, EVE repairs and reactivates WALL-E, but finds that his memory has been reset and his personality is gone.
GameCube: Disney's Party: Neverland: Hudson Soft/Tomy (Japan) Electronic Arts (US/Europe) 2002: GameCube Disney's Party [6] Jupiter: 2002: Game Boy Advance Disney's Hide and Sneak: Capcom: Capcom: 2003: GameCube Mickey's Journey To The West: Disney Mobile: Disney Mobile: 2007: Mobile phones Wizards of Mickey: Disney Mobile: Disney Mobile: 2008 ...
Disney Learning: Mickey Mouse Kindergarten (2000) (Microsoft Windows) Disney Learning: Mickey Mouse Preschool (2000) (Microsoft Windows) Disney Learning: Mickey Mouse Toddler (2000) (Microsoft Windows) Disney's 102 Dalmatians Activity Center (2000) Disney's 3-D Adventure, Tigger's Family Tree (2000) Disney's Doug's Big Game (2000)
Disney's Magical Quest: Game Boy Advance, Mega Drive/Genesis, SNES: Disney's Magical Mirror: GameCube: Disney's Hide and Sneak: GameCube: Mickey Mania: Sega CD, Mega Drive/Genesis, SNES: Mickey's Dangerous Chase: Game Boy: Mickey's Racing Adventure: GBC: Mickey's Speedway USA: Nintendo 64: Walt Disney World Quest: Magical Racing Tour: Dreamcast ...
The film cost $180 million to produce, a record-breaking sum for an animated film at the time. Following Pixar tradition, WALL-E was paired with a short film titled Presto for its theatrical release. WALL-E premiered at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on June 23, 2008, and was released in the United States on June 27. The film received ...
WALL-E (short for Waste Allocation Load Lifter: Earth-Class) [1] is the main protagonist of the 2008 Disney/Pixar animated film of the same name. He is primarily voiced by Ben Burtt . WALL-E was created by director, Andrew Stanton , and writer, Jim Reardon .
Asobo Studio SAS is a French video game developer based in Bordeaux and founded in 2002. The studio is most known for developing video game adaptations of several Pixar movies, A Plague Tale: Innocence, and the 2020 and 2024 versions of Microsoft Flight Simulator.
Toy Story 3: The Video Game was published by Disney, and was the first Pixar game in years to not be published by THQ. [26] In the United States, Toy Story 3: The Video Game was released on June 15, 2010, three days prior to the film's theatrical release.