Gotta give it to B&L ship buidling, they managed to build a vessel that not only lasted 700 years, but also retained 100% functionality throughout, all thanks to their fleet of robots on board. They truely built something remarkable ^^
@@anidiot2284 Naw, the Ancients from stargate had a ship built called Destiny and its seed ships built and these literally flew for millions of years without any crew or robots, just an AI. Granted these ships were in need of major repairs after that amount of time but still.
@@laurencefraser Well, the main thing is that ships lasted that long. even when stuck in an isolated system with no outside technicians being able to get called on for millenia on end and just whatever local resources, stations, and planet are there (said planets may be very unpleasant).
I find it interesting that it looks like originally there was some sort of class distinction (Economy, Coach, and First Class), but overtime everyone and everything became the same.
You have to admit that the Axiom and the others of her class are incredibly beautiful and sophisticated vessels, and show how incredibly technologically advanced humanity was at the time when they had to abandon Earth. The fact that the ship continued to work perfectly for over seven hundred years, providing every comfort for the people aboard it during that time - pointing to some incredible technology behind the scenes - is something that is very rare in science fiction.
It's not terribly difficult to do. The question, is in being able to design robots that can appropriately and consistently do a particular complex task. After that, it's just a matter of making sure every possible task is covered, and then arranging it all in a "Rock, Paper, Scissors, Lizard, Spock" configuration to create a reasonable amount of redundancy in the system. When a machine breaks down, others fix it, when the fixers break down, others fix them, and so on. Set it up right, and so long as you've got resources, it'll pretty much never fail.
@@Bossmodegoat well the energy source woudnt have been hard in this case. Solar would have been the way to go. Every window being a panel and make everything as efficient as possible. Entirely doable if you have infinite resources and no budget to do it. The biggest problem would have been the raw materials needed to keep on fixing the robots since it looked like they were dumping some broken robots. But we also dont see all of their machine shops and if they had some kind of mining robot harvesting asteroids which would defeat this entire issue. Largely this whole thing is something we could arguably build with todays technology except for the AI part.
Man yes I also see this real spaceship on about 17 years old ago! And this spaceship is clearly real and how many old r u when u seen this spaceship?plz answer!❤
Even if we assumes all captains are around 30s when they are appointing... (which is really young) and no retirement, average age should be around 160-180 years or more. Medical tech on the Axiom is really good especially for all of the passenger's bone loss and obesity.
Considering it's almost hollow layout and how casually it breaks through debri fields and then lands on the planet with no scratch, that thing can probably beat most battleships in sci-fi just by ramming them.
Plus the robots display an abundance of intellect and creativity that I believe would allow them to produce improvised weaponry. EVE units for one were heavily armed.
My head cannon is that the Axiom and all the other cruise ships, have an attached fleet of automated support ships. These scout out save routs for their attached liner, harvest and refine resources from space and maybe even serve as protection from potential hostile aliens (We don't see them in the movie, doesn't mean they aren't out there). This potentially means that when Humanity goes back to Earth and starts their new civilisation, they still have vast fleets of automated explorers, miners and protectors, funnelling the galaxy's riches back to Earth and guarding it against anyone who would try to stop them.
@@weldonwin now all I can think about is how a galactic community would avoid them like the plague like HOLY SHIT THE AXIOM IS COMING RUN EVACUATE THE PLANET type of terror like the axiom is the qourions from mass effect but instead of being a nuisance if they decided to stay in solar system it would be a world ending event
"It saved mankind when it left, and again when it return." What a poetic line. It saved humanity from a dying earth, and again when it let them go from a prison that is itself.
This starship makes the UNSC Infinity looked completely dwarfed, and any inferior starship that stood next to it....were referred to as the *"Interstellar Overcast."* It's no warship at all, but from its immense size and its sophisticated self-sustaining capabilities, the BnL Axiom-class...ascends above all in the history of Interstellar starship designs.
From a purely technological point of view, the Axiom effectively overshadows any UNSC and Covenant ship. Nearly infinite power generation capability, self-regenerating supply systems, advanced anti-gravity transportation systems, plentiful energy shielding use, hype capable communication systems and a robotic workforce that could maintain the ship basically indefinitely so long as it had resources to work with. It is in the EVE model, that we get how truly devastatingly powerful the BnL corporation could have been had it gone to war. High speed, small autonomous death robot with advanced plasma weapons ,capable of destroying tanks and above and these where considered "defensive" in nature. If BnL had wanted it could have developed a fleet of ships that would devastate the Covenant and the UNSC and maybe even rival the Forerunners.
And one thing that irked me is that it cannot recycle electronics and other similar things from what i saw on that one scene where they would just jettison it
@@aspopulvera9130 while there is no definitive answer and seeing how they where effectively doing in space what they had done to Earth, there is only 1 answer and is supported by the movie. Basically they have a dedicated manufacturing unit in the ship that can produce basically everything they need, so long as they have the resources. Meaning that space mining was a thing. But to make this mroe believable, we also know that while BnL builds things to be disposable and replaceable, it also builds to last. Most likely outside of the Wall-E incident not many robots or anything major was destroyed and the build rate was enough to make up for the loss rate.
I swear to God that ship is in the uncanny valley of sci-fi tech It's capable enough to go tooth and nail against the strongest and fastest ships in sci-fi while also not being completely bs to the point of absurdity
I personally love how the design is literally how a Corporate PR/Design team would try and model it; Paradoxically modern and ancient and futuristic, luxury and utility
@@funveeable they probably started off with normal commerce but through 700 years the main ai probably decided it was best to just pacify the population through endless and free consumerism
There is a theory that they are drinking people. Living in space for hundreds of years, people die, food supplies dwindle, use the dead people for food. The best way to eat something and not mind where it came from is to blend it up and drink it through a straw... what are they drinking?
I like to think that, at some point further down the road, the Axiom and its sisters might be sent back into the stars. Not as a cruise liner, but as the ultimate vessel of exploration and discovery. If you strip away the fluff, they would really excel at the role, already able to conduct some form of mining and food processing to give the ships unparalleled longevity.
@@nightfuryman1209 Axiom can carry 500k people in extreme comfort. It can easily carry just 10k and the living space no longer used by 490k repurposed for Deep Deep Space exploration.
The universe of Wall-E in another setting could be an incredibly depressing one about corporatocracy, consumerism, desperate space exploration and AI sentience. Instead it's a backdrop for a love story of two robots.
Another welcome break is how the corporate dystopia isnt ill intending The corporations arent sacrificing babies for profit for shit and gigles Rather in the pursue of satisfiying demand they fucked the enviroment as collateral but otherwise they werent actively seeking to make life awful
@@valentinov901 corporate dystopias rarely are as bad say cyberpunk however they do have the one trope of having exorbitant fees for everything and slums wealthy or otherwise, lots and lots of slums.
With how huge and absolutely tanky this *cruise ship* is, and how terribly powerful the weapons on EvE, a *recon drone* are, imagine if BnL had just gone Warhammer mode with their tech.
It can already beat most sci-fi battleships just by ramming them. I assume that if they developed battleships, it could disintegrate stuff with one laser…
I am impressed at the amount of lore, detail, and worldbuilding there seemed to be behind BnL and the Axiom ship. Like I dont remember any of this in Wall-E. I think these are some of the first Templin vids where the Institute actually uncovered information i never would have been able to find myself. Well done, btw Wall-E is my fav Pixar movie! Love these vids
It honestly is a remarkable ship, I can't think of any other sci-fi ship that exhibits so much room and comfort for its passengers, while maintaining full functionality for hundreds of years.
"Too much garbage in your base? There's plenty of Space out in space. Join the BNL Fleet leaving each day. We'll clean up the mess while you're away! ...The jewel of the BNL Fleet, the Axiom! Putting the Star, in Executive Starliner. Because the BNL Space, is the final, fun-tear!"
@@jordan1192 And here's the first words of a new Human civilization: "You kids are gonna learn to grow all kinds of things. Vegetable Plants- Pizza Plants! Hahahaha! My, its good to be Home!"
I like to think that the other ship crews and passengers weren’t so docile and instead after a long enough time decided to colonize other systems. The tech aboard is obviously amazing to self sustain for 700 years. Turn it over to manufacturing and you can set yourself up with some amazing industrial automation with an entire solar system of resources.
@@cheatermkcheaterson to my knowledge, the rest of the ships where basically doing the same in their own specific routes. All of them where waiting for a return signal that only came after the Axiom was basically en route. But that is pure speculation and I've never seen anything to imply the Axiom wasn't effectively the last of its kind.
@@Keemperor40K even assuming the Axiom did send a "green light" signal for the other ships all of their ottopilots would still be following directive a113 and would simply not report the message to their Captains
There is evidence of there being many more ships out there. One popular belief is that before directive A1-13 was given, at least one other ship decided to abandon the voyage and attempt to land on a habitable planet it found, possibly an attempt at colonization by their Auto pilot; It's believed that that ship crash landed and ended up becoming the mountain chain often viewed in the distance in another Pixar film Onwards. The main part of the theory is about how the shape of the mountain is heavily emphasized in the film to the point of being a part of the plot, and people discovered that the mountain's shape looks exactly like the outline of an Axion ship if it were tilted in a crash.
the fact the axiom lasted for several centuries beyond its limit couldn't have been done without the robots' help keeping the humans ok, now they're back on earth they will be able to use the tech to help fix earth and grow pizza plant!
With the amount of ships of this type launched, you could make some very dark (and light) stories out there ... destroyed ships, robot-uprisings, mutations (zombies), alien invasions or cases, where the crew actually did not get fat and started to explore space or settled on a new planet.
I’m so glad wall-E is getting the treatment from the Teplin institute. Just recently I was thinking about how much I loved that movie growing up and I rewatched it just to fall in love with it again. Love hearing the deep lore. Keep up the good work
It would be interesting to explore, if you were a omniversal explorer. A massive ship carrying the last of humanity, but humanity is so far gone they can't even really walk and they've even begun some kind of backwards evolution. Imagine being the only person on the ship that can walk freely, with the native residents in awe as they watch you walk past their little chair pods.
Wall-E: cute simple love story between two robots :) Templin Institute 15 years later: "The Axiom was a lavish prison antithetical to the human spirit."
The thing is, Wall-E was never a cute simple love story. Actually it is a pretty scathing corporate dystopian and apocalyptic Sci-Fi sartire, hidden in some children movie 2 robo love story camouflage.
@@sagichnicht6748don't forget that this is probably humanity's best case scenario. Robots loyal to a fault, no famine, we escape to space, no alien invasion, or nuclear war. Even humans are pacified against each other, and still our biggest enemy ends up being ourselves.
It's weapons could rival or exceed anything in Halo, probably in Trek and many other universes. EVE's "defensive" plasma rifle, effectively devastated cargo ships with contemptuous ease, wasn't even a real "war" weapon and was also hand-held. I am scared to think what a full on dreadnought sized BnL plasma cannon could do. Also these vessels would have advanced energy shields, as energy barriers are a very common feature throughout the entire ship in innumerable types, variations and use cases.
@@YanBaoQin That thing broke through debri field right after braking its FTL and then landed on a planet with gravity without a scratch. Such a trick would tear most sci-fi ships to atomic dust.
Except that as near as I can tell, everything was included in the ticket price. That is, nobody has paid for a damn thing aboard the _Axiom_ since it left port. No humans (aside from the captain) has done any work in their lives, but the _Axiom_ continues to cater to their whims.
@@boobah5643 there was probably some kind of shopping going on at first, simply due to the sheer amount of shops and the existence of different accommodation classes, but it seems currency was just phased out until everything was gone but consumerism
Man, you guys are really covering more of Wall-E. This is such an interesting list of lore that I never realized was there. Man, i feel like one of those people, again, I am not sure if you guys will see this and it's definitely off-topic from the video, but what if you guys did an episode about the Blue Mermaids from High School Fleet/Haifuri?
I honestly love that movie so much, its just a truly different take on how well you can make a movie that both is marketed towards kids while having a very interesting and entertaining story for all ages.
Artwork at 1:17 shows the ship class retained the bulbous bow (blue-painted part of the hull) as if it's a holdover from the original ocean-faring liners that starliner class is based from I like that it's designers are paying homage to stuff like this
People always talk about how the Excelsior class was in service for 130 years or something like that, but imagine the NX class still being in active continuous service during the time of Discovery S3. Like damn.
Gene Roddenberry envisioned the future with starships maintained by a crew and a captain. "Wall-E" envisions what the future is most likely going to be, no crew and a token captain.
what a great video, i really liked the prison comparison at the end, and how serious you take this, that every universe has the same level of respect and serious thought trough in the videos, very nice.
You have to admit, the Axiom was still a remarkable feat of starship design that lasted a very, very long time in space. Next we should see an entry on the Omnidroids from the Incredibles.
Fascinating to imagine aliens coming across one of these ships millennia from now and discovering the bizarre graveyard of a luxury ship with extinct passengers and robots not sure what to do
I believe there were more ships of the type just the Axiom, if I remember correctly from what we're shown in the movie. I wonder what happened to them, did they return to earth or are they still out there? What became of them and did any manage to come out of the constant consumption and try for something more?
I’ve always found curious that the first generation just… stayed there. What happened after the first five years? How did people react? People started rioting just a few months into COVID, I’m surprised that there weren’t any riots or a civil war. None of the captains considered traveling to another world to colonize?
as for the last part, the ships were not intended for interstellar travel, while they could harvest water and resources from the Kuiper belt, if they attempted interstellar travel, they would run out of resources and die
By the time the Earth was devastated, the Human race was a blindly obedient consumerist group, that couldn't put one and one to make 2 if all of them tried. In many ways they weren't different from cattle, except that they lived a life of fabricated luxury with nothing to change their perspective or even a desire to even try. By this standard, the captain's where more or less the sole exception, having slightly more free will and initiative than the rest of the race combined.
@@roaringbeardragon4531 Probably not, the ship can jump the 49 AUs from the kuiper belt to earth within about a 30 seconds, and 49 AUs is about 6.75 light hours, so the ship can theoretically travel at over 800 times the speed of light. Given the nearest star is 4.3 light years away, the axiom traveling at top speed could get there is exactly 2 days, at the "hyper jump speed" And it can cross the entire galaxy's diameter in about 110 years. And it would take 3000 years to get to the nearest galaxy (not possible from the films 700 year timespan, but given the ship lasted that long with no problems, im sure it could hold out for a couple thousand more years) Edit: the 30 seconds is only the on screen time, it may be longer, only cut for our viewing pleasure, if it was, it would make my travel time numbers take longer, but even if it took less than 3 hours (probably only still a few minutes), it would still be twice as fast as the speed of light, making the trip to alpha centuri in less than 2 years, still nothing compared to real tech.
In any case, planet Earth with an atmosphere, loads of (maybe dirty/evaporated) water and garbage heaps (hey! lots of resources on the surface!) is a better alternative for (re)colonization than some bare rock planet with no atmosphere, no water, minerals (need volcanism in the planet's past) and hydrocarbons such as oil
Don't know why, but every time they break some fictional starship down into meters length, it always sounds smaller to me. Versus the description of the Babylon 5 station at 5 miles in length, and the JMC Red Dwarf at 6 miles long.
@@ConsolasEight somehow I’d misremembered the D as 0.6mi (1km), not 0.4. Damn! I’m miles native too, but “100kph= 60mph; 80kph = 50mph” is buried deep in my brain so I’m fine with km as well
To be fair, it goes without saying that there's something impressive for being small and still having a large capacity - like, that speaks to a level of space efficiency that is kind of insane.
"The jewel of the BNL fleet, the Axiom! Spend your five-year cruise in style, waited on 24 hours a day by our fully automated crew. While your captain and autopilot chart a course for non-stop entertainment, fine dining and with our all-access hoverchairs, even Grandma can join the fun! There's no need to walk! The Axiom......putting the 'star' in 'executive starliner'!" It's amazing to think how she was able to remain pristine and fully functional for seven centuries with the capacity to continue in identical fashion for many centuries more. BNL really built her to last.
Then there's me who just realized that to move the entire human population of world you'd need btw more than 20 to atleast 10,000 of these depending on how screwed humanity was in this timeline
Depends on population, but if it was only Axiom class, it would indeed be around 10k, assuming a Human population of 6 billion. But I've seen drawings of smaller ships, probably between half and a third as capable, so the actual fleet was closer to 50k when all was said and done from the different classes of ships.
they should have made systems that repurposed the trash into a source of energy or broken it down to a harmless state. If they were really creatively smart, the trash could have been used in the construction of ships.
One thing that I wish we knew is if the captain ever made contact with other star-liners to come back to Earth. I'd imagine some horror scenarios where some Axiom Type Star-liners went silent due to technical failures or other sorts of space phenomenon
Each Axiom Class can hold up to 600,000 people and not in cramped conditions either which is impressive. Assuming that the entire population of earth was evacuated, and using some rather crude math i chucked in a calculator so take it with a grain of salt, calculated to be 208,843,191,127, divided by 600,000 assuming that its a hard 600,000 cap means that BNL would have to have built over 348,000 axiom class starliners......i honestly wouldn't be surprised if they pulled it off.
Now imagine autopilot coming full rogue servitor run, just fleet of pampering robots, flying from planet to planet, abducting everyone onboard and commencing mandatory pampering, and for determined exterminators? Army of EVE leaping and flying all around.
Pretty sure whoever designed this ship was looking at the Poseidon (2006) because a lot of the lines and external aesthetics look pretty similar. Which is a nice reference.
One thing i noticed is that after roughly 700 years the space junk is still orbiting around Earth. That in fact couldn't happen because every satellite that is currently in orbit will fall back on Earth one day or another (though considering every satellite at a maximum height of 800 kilometres in orbit, because beyond that space junk takes up to a thousand year or more to eventually fall down and crash)
given BnL's complete disregard for recycling, it's a miracle that ship sustained life for 700 years. We briefly see the garbage disposal section of the ship and it has at least two jumbo Wall-E units seemingly shoveling tons of garbage out into space every day, completely unsustainable. We have to assume these guys were heading towards a very sudden, very catastrophic failure.
I'd completely forgotten about that part. Without recycling they must have some way of replenishing mass or else the ship would simply run out of material. Only idea I can come up with is they send robots out to collect materials from asteroid or nebula.
@@AureliusLaurentius1099 Bruh?? Like what exactly? Also people waste is literally the most recycleable waste there is. Y'all heard of a sewage treatment plant?
Great to see such an informative video around the vessel from one of my favorite films of all time. Just about all the facts presented here are accurate.
Axiom is really impressive, 700 years in the punishing space environment and no sign of degradation… for reference, ISS was only designed for 10 years of service, it’s now pushing it at 25, and given current political circumstances, it probably won’t get past 30…
I hope the Templin Institute eventually covers the Space Pirates from Metroid. So many things could be discussed, like the Metroid domestication programs, tactics, and experiments. Metroid has a lot to offer to the Institute
The fact that humanity was able to develop these ships really makes you question why they didn't expand and colonize to other planets. If the Axiom was capable of returning to Earth in a few minutes, as seen in the movie, humanity could've long colonized other planets and solar systems. The Axiom was able to relocate itself from the Horsehead Nebula, which is at a distance of 1,500 light years from Earth, in a reasonable amount of time. Taking this into consideration, it makes you really think where humanity could've been if BNL recognized the true magnitude of what they created with these ships.
Woah... I really love the first opening of this video, it is like a good animation for opening a high-end super computer, I love it! And yet yeah, It's very remarkable that the Axiom ship can manage to reach that point of years that have passed yet the ship is still all good! Like I'm still curious, how can that manage to be powered over hundreds of years? And also it is quite sad that most people inside don't realise that they are in a prison... But still, it served its purpose!
You can tell that Wall-E was the movie of the week this week at the Templin Institute. All those field agents pulled off of their crucial off-world assignments, to watch this film in anticipation for a full investigation to that universe.
"the axiom type starliners housed many fitness centres" Doesn't seem like the people living in the star cruisers used them in any way, shape or form given they look like they've just eaten an entire boulder for breakfast with a side of black holes and literal stars, they are definitely more dense than a white dwarf star
These Wall-E videos makes me wonder what happened to the other Axiom Starliners cause there was more than just the one if the in-movie ads are truthful. Here's hoping for some Gundam or other mecha anime. I would assist in that if you need an expert.
@@SwiftGundam Nope! I just watched the whole end credits sequence again and at no point is my previous statement made true. The animation depicts probably 100-300 years passage of time and there is no mention of the other starships. Dang...
I wish there was more lore on the other BNL star liners. We know about the Axiom, but what happened to the dozens of other star liners? Maybe some were lost in space. Maybe some went on to colonize other planets. Maybe some are still continuing their leisurely existence. Did any return to Earth after the events of WALL-E?
I believe they're still in space under order A-113. I get an All Tomorrows feeling when you have normal humanity who return from Axiom and compare to those who stayed in space, further evolving.
@@longdogmurph Every year, the Axiom sent EVEs to earth to check on its habitability. If the other star liners also had EVEs, surely they’d discover the new vegetation planted by the Axiom humans. The auto pilots of the other ships would still obey A113, but maybe the humans on the other ships would shut down the auto pilots and go back to earth.
@@longdogmurph If those other Starliners sent their EVEs, then I'm pretty sure they would automatically return to Earth. Assuming the Control AI doesn't rebel.
@@imsomewhatcertain1024 but they wouldnt. you gotta remember the only reason why the axiom was even able to return was because of 1 anomaly the autopilot wasnt able to control: wall e. if wall e hadnt gone to the axiom, auto wouldve just thrown the plant away first chance he got without anything else to interfere with the a113 directive.
Makes me curious if after the humans that returned to earth kinda re setup shop, did they attempt to reach out to the other Axium ships still out there and tell them its time to return as well?
Some believe one ship successfully activating the return would of sent out a return command to all of the rest of the fleet, but some say some ships probably landed on other world's before A1-13 for one reason or another
we get a brief glimpse of ~several hundred years after the axiom landed that shows earth gets cleaned up and recolonized. the other ships are more likely still on their routes. the only reason why the axiom was able to return was because of wall e. wall e disrupted things enough to create a domino effect being the 1 aspect auto had no control over.
That’s not a plothole at all? A bunker on earth would have actually been worse it would have delayed the cleaning process, caused mental health problems, bone structure problems and it would have been harder to build bunkers in the state the earth was in, the axiom ships were prebuilt they were used as space cruisers before the evacuation of earth
Gotta give it to B&L ship buidling, they managed to build a vessel that not only lasted 700 years, but also retained 100% functionality throughout, all thanks to their fleet of robots on board.
They truely built something remarkable ^^
The Forerunners are the only one who was close but even they had systems break down shortly after the firing of the rings
The Imperium has ships still flying around that are over 10000 years old.
@@anidiot2284 Naw, the Ancients from stargate had a ship built called Destiny and its seed ships built and these literally flew for millions of years without any crew or robots, just an AI. Granted these ships were in need of major repairs after that amount of time but still.
@@SephirothRyu But how many of them managed that without time in dock for repairs, maintenance, and resupply from other entities?
@@laurencefraser Well, the main thing is that ships lasted that long. even when stuck in an isolated system with no outside technicians being able to get called on for millenia on end and just whatever local resources, stations, and planet are there (said planets may be very unpleasant).
I find it interesting that it looks like originally there was some sort of class distinction (Economy, Coach, and First Class), but overtime everyone and everything became the same.
Class becomes meaningless when nobody does anything.
@@singletona082
Well said.
Capitalism went so far it became Marx’s wet dream.
Here's your hundredth like you earned it.
I think it was likely an archaic leftover from cruise ships of centuries past.
"It saved mankind once when it left, amd again when it returned" love that line
You have to admit that the Axiom and the others of her class are incredibly beautiful and sophisticated vessels, and show how incredibly technologically advanced humanity was at the time when they had to abandon Earth. The fact that the ship continued to work perfectly for over seven hundred years, providing every comfort for the people aboard it during that time - pointing to some incredible technology behind the scenes - is something that is very rare in science fiction.
It's not terribly difficult to do. The question, is in being able to design robots that can appropriately and consistently do a particular complex task. After that, it's just a matter of making sure every possible task is covered, and then arranging it all in a "Rock, Paper, Scissors, Lizard, Spock" configuration to create a reasonable amount of redundancy in the system. When a machine breaks down, others fix it, when the fixers break down, others fix them, and so on. Set it up right, and so long as you've got resources, it'll pretty much never fail.
@@DoremiFasolatido1979 Yeah just create a completely automated self repairing system with an infinite energy source that never fails.
Very simple
@@Bossmodegoat well the energy source woudnt have been hard in this case. Solar would have been the way to go. Every window being a panel and make everything as efficient as possible. Entirely doable if you have infinite resources and no budget to do it. The biggest problem would have been the raw materials needed to keep on fixing the robots since it looked like they were dumping some broken robots. But we also dont see all of their machine shops and if they had some kind of mining robot harvesting asteroids which would defeat this entire issue.
Largely this whole thing is something we could arguably build with todays technology except for the AI part.
@@BOYVIRGO666 I don't think the Axiom has enough surface area to power itself with solar energy unless it sits, like, directly next to a star.
@@somdudewillson we dont really have enough information to say. They could also be using solar drones. Lots of options
The Axiom is unironically one my favourite starships in fiction. Thanks guys!
Same,it’s a huge inspiration for my own fiction
It’s not just fiction. Axiom Space is actually very, very real!
Man yes I also see this real spaceship on about 17 years old ago! And this spaceship is clearly real and how many old r u when u seen this spaceship?plz answer!❤
I didn't noticed at first, but pretty much all captains of the ship got over 130 - 140 years old. I mean, wow.
Looking like blobs too!
Then again, that could be their time of service, not their actual lifespan which could be even more impressive.
Even if we assumes all captains are around 30s when they are appointing... (which is really young) and no retirement, average age should be around 160-180 years or more.
Medical tech on the Axiom is really good especially for all of the passenger's bone loss and obesity.
advanced meds, food filled with everything a body needs, no stress.. This would def. increase life expectancy
Also I only just noticed they become fatter over time
Best part is medical technology is advancing in real life so most people under like 35 will likely live to 100 if im right.
Considering it's almost hollow layout and how casually it breaks through debri fields and then lands on the planet with no scratch, that thing can probably beat most battleships in sci-fi just by ramming them.
Plus the robots display an abundance of intellect and creativity that I believe would allow them to produce improvised weaponry.
EVE units for one were heavily armed.
@@LakesideTrey Oh, and eve units weren't even combat units, imagine if BnL went full warhammer.
My head cannon is that the Axiom and all the other cruise ships, have an attached fleet of automated support ships. These scout out save routs for their attached liner, harvest and refine resources from space and maybe even serve as protection from potential hostile aliens (We don't see them in the movie, doesn't mean they aren't out there). This potentially means that when Humanity goes back to Earth and starts their new civilisation, they still have vast fleets of automated explorers, miners and protectors, funnelling the galaxy's riches back to Earth and guarding it against anyone who would try to stop them.
@@weldonwin now all I can think about is how a galactic community would avoid them like the plague like HOLY SHIT THE AXIOM IS COMING RUN EVACUATE THE PLANET type of terror like the axiom is the qourions from mass effect but instead of being a nuisance if they decided to stay in solar system it would be a world ending event
@@weldonwin we do see smaller rockets depart and return in the beginning of the movie, it does make sense.
"It saved mankind when it left, and again when it return."
What a poetic line. It saved humanity from a dying earth, and again when it let them go from a prison that is itself.
The Templin Institute is on a Wall-e kick and I’m all for it
This starship makes the UNSC Infinity looked completely dwarfed, and any inferior starship that stood next to it....were referred to as the *"Interstellar Overcast."*
It's no warship at all, but from its immense size and its sophisticated self-sustaining capabilities, the BnL Axiom-class...ascends above all in the history of Interstellar starship designs.
From a purely technological point of view, the Axiom effectively overshadows any UNSC and Covenant ship.
Nearly infinite power generation capability, self-regenerating supply systems, advanced anti-gravity transportation systems, plentiful energy shielding use, hype capable communication systems and a robotic workforce that could maintain the ship basically indefinitely so long as it had resources to work with.
It is in the EVE model, that we get how truly devastatingly powerful the BnL corporation could have been had it gone to war.
High speed, small autonomous death robot with advanced plasma weapons ,capable of destroying tanks and above and these where considered "defensive" in nature.
If BnL had wanted it could have developed a fleet of ships that would devastate the Covenant and the UNSC and maybe even rival the Forerunners.
And one thing that irked me is that it cannot recycle electronics and other similar things from what i saw on that one scene where they would just jettison it
@@aspopulvera9130 while there is no definitive answer and seeing how they where effectively doing in space what they had done to Earth, there is only 1 answer and is supported by the movie.
Basically they have a dedicated manufacturing unit in the ship that can produce basically everything they need, so long as they have the resources.
Meaning that space mining was a thing.
But to make this mroe believable, we also know that while BnL builds things to be disposable and replaceable, it also builds to last.
Most likely outside of the Wall-E incident not many robots or anything major was destroyed and the build rate was enough to make up for the loss rate.
Holy shite is BnL just mankind's empire before the Age of Strife?
Don't forget where the Axiom is found at the start, it's found in a Nebula.
That looks like a great place to gather materials tbh.
This has the same energy as the Lordship of Duloc episode, and I support it 100%
I swear to God that ship is in the uncanny valley of sci-fi tech
It's capable enough to go tooth and nail against the strongest and fastest ships in sci-fi while also not being completely bs to the point of absurdity
I personally love how the design is literally how a Corporate PR/Design team would try and model it; Paradoxically modern and ancient and futuristic, luxury and utility
Who is the Axiom advertising to? None of the passengers have jobs or money. What's the point of making stuff when you give it away for free?
@@funveeable they probably started off with normal commerce but through 700 years the main ai probably decided it was best to just pacify the population through endless and free consumerism
@@funveeable Advertising stuff gives the advertiser AIs a reason to exist so they won't delete themselves.
@@marcoaraiza9381 Luxury gay space communism
either this ship has star trek like replicator technology or 100% recycling tech
It doesn’t have such recycling tech, they dumped trash into space.
You mean human flesh
@@Terrible_Content
[Insert obligatory GameTheory intro here]
Or astroid mining
There is a theory that they are drinking people.
Living in space for hundreds of years, people die, food supplies dwindle, use the dead people for food. The best way to eat something and not mind where it came from is to blend it up and drink it through a straw... what are they drinking?
"It saved Mankind once when it left, and again when it return" What a chilling line to end on.
I like to think that, at some point further down the road, the Axiom and its sisters might be sent back into the stars. Not as a cruise liner, but as the ultimate vessel of exploration and discovery. If you strip away the fluff, they would really excel at the role, already able to conduct some form of mining and food processing to give the ships unparalleled longevity.
Slap a few missiles on it and you have a fully capable warship too.
You’d still need to keep a city at least to house the populations of the crew and their families
@@nightfuryman1209 the Axiom pretty much already is the city.
@@nightfuryman1209 Axiom can carry 500k people in extreme comfort. It can easily carry just 10k and the living space no longer used by 490k repurposed for Deep Deep Space exploration.
Actually that would be pretty cool. I could imagine it being converted more towards something like a Galaxy Class Starship from Star Trek, in concept.
love that last quote
" it save mankind when it left and later when it returned "
makes te wall-e ending that much emotional
The universe of Wall-E in another setting could be an incredibly depressing one about corporatocracy, consumerism, desperate space exploration and AI sentience. Instead it's a backdrop for a love story of two robots.
with an arguably insane AI in very bad need of maintenance as the bad guy.
i like that. its one of hope and love rather than depression or dystopia
Another welcome break is how the corporate dystopia isnt ill intending
The corporations arent sacrificing babies for profit for shit and gigles
Rather in the pursue of satisfiying demand they fucked the enviroment as collateral but otherwise they werent actively seeking to make life awful
@@valentinov901 corporate dystopias rarely are as bad say cyberpunk however they do have the one trope of having exorbitant fees for everything and slums wealthy or otherwise, lots and lots of slums.
@@adamahmed366 well I’d say it’s those 2 things to overcome depression and dystopia. And it did without anyone realizing it until later.
With how huge and absolutely tanky this *cruise ship* is, and how terribly powerful the weapons on EvE, a *recon drone* are, imagine if BnL had just gone Warhammer mode with their tech.
It can already beat most sci-fi battleships just by ramming them. I assume that if they developed battleships, it could disintegrate stuff with one laser…
Dark Age of Technology²
I am impressed at the amount of lore, detail, and worldbuilding there seemed to be behind BnL and the Axiom ship. Like I dont remember any of this in Wall-E. I think these are some of the first Templin vids where the Institute actually uncovered information i never would have been able to find myself.
Well done, btw Wall-E is my fav Pixar movie! Love these vids
WALL-E is something else when you take a look at the untold lore.
"It saved humanity once when it left, and once more when it returned"
That was a beautiful line.
It honestly is a remarkable ship, I can't think of any other sci-fi ship that exhibits so much room and comfort for its passengers, while maintaining full functionality for hundreds of years.
"Too much garbage in your base? There's plenty of Space out in space. Join the BNL Fleet leaving each day. We'll clean up the mess while you're away! ...The jewel of the BNL Fleet, the Axiom! Putting the Star, in Executive Starliner. Because the BNL Space, is the final, fun-tear!"
Those were kind of the last words of human civilization
@@jordan1192 And here's the first words of a new Human civilization: "You kids are gonna learn to grow all kinds of things. Vegetable Plants- Pizza Plants! Hahahaha! My, its good to be Home!"
Who is the Axiom advertising to? None of the passengers have jobs or money. What's the point of making stuff when you give it away for free?
@@jakespacepiratee3740 Indeed
Funfact i checked up on that place
Its doing well
I think it’s “Too much garbage in your Face”, not base.
The years for the captains seem to average about 130 years (not sure if life or service). I guess the healthcare must have been decent on the ship.
And that's them becoming obese blobs.
Imagine if they stayed in peak physical condition?
Most likely service.
If so, they have a life of around 250, if we assume, they became captains at age 20
This thing is more of an ark than a luxury ship, just like the Eldar Craftworlds.
Albeit if the Eldar inside retained their hedonism in a less extreme form.
Last time I checked the lore, Eldar Craftworlds were originally trading vessels, oversized over-pretentious but still mega-scale trading vessels.
@@anonymousmind8402 Obese Eldar... that's a thought.
Andrew Stanton is a Christian btw, so of course it is one of many biblical references in the movie
@@SgtHawk45utterly impossible
Do Eldar even eat anything like junk food?
I remember thinking the axiom was the last ship and I had wondered what had happened to the others
I like to think that the other ship crews and passengers weren’t so docile and instead after a long enough time decided to colonize other systems. The tech aboard is obviously amazing to self sustain for 700 years. Turn it over to manufacturing and you can set yourself up with some amazing industrial automation with an entire solar system of resources.
@@cheatermkcheaterson to my knowledge, the rest of the ships where basically doing the same in their own specific routes.
All of them where waiting for a return signal that only came after the Axiom was basically en route.
But that is pure speculation and I've never seen anything to imply the Axiom wasn't effectively the last of its kind.
@@Keemperor40K even assuming the Axiom did send a "green light" signal for the other ships all of their ottopilots would still be following directive a113 and would simply not report the message to their Captains
There is evidence of there being many more ships out there. One popular belief is that before directive A1-13 was given, at least one other ship decided to abandon the voyage and attempt to land on a habitable planet it found, possibly an attempt at colonization by their Auto pilot; It's believed that that ship crash landed and ended up becoming the mountain chain often viewed in the distance in another Pixar film Onwards. The main part of the theory is about how the shape of the mountain is heavily emphasized in the film to the point of being a part of the plot, and people discovered that the mountain's shape looks exactly like the outline of an Axion ship if it were tilted in a crash.
@@Keemperor40K were*
the fact the axiom lasted for several centuries beyond its limit couldn't have been done without the robots' help keeping the humans ok, now they're back on earth they will be able to use the tech to help fix earth and grow pizza plant!
With the amount of ships of this type launched, you could make some very dark (and light) stories out there ... destroyed ships, robot-uprisings, mutations (zombies), alien invasions or cases, where the crew actually did not get fat and started to explore space or settled on a new planet.
NGL sounds like fallout vaults lol.
@@lkf627 my exact thought
I’m so glad wall-E is getting the treatment from the Teplin institute. Just recently I was thinking about how much I loved that movie growing up and I rewatched it just to fall in love with it again.
Love hearing the deep lore. Keep up the good work
It would be interesting to explore, if you were a omniversal explorer. A massive ship carrying the last of humanity, but humanity is so far gone they can't even really walk and they've even begun some kind of backwards evolution. Imagine being the only person on the ship that can walk freely, with the native residents in awe as they watch you walk past their little chair pods.
2:12 That quote right there single handedly lands this video a like!
Wall-E: cute simple love story between two robots :)
Templin Institute 15 years later: "The Axiom was a lavish prison antithetical to the human spirit."
The thing is, Wall-E was never a cute simple love story. Actually it is a pretty scathing corporate dystopian and apocalyptic Sci-Fi sartire, hidden in some children movie 2 robo love story camouflage.
@@sagichnicht6748don't forget that this is probably humanity's best case scenario. Robots loyal to a fault, no famine, we escape to space, no alien invasion, or nuclear war. Even humans are pacified against each other, and still our biggest enemy ends up being ourselves.
If this kind of ship was put into military applications in real life, I would classify this as a superdreadnought due to its massive size
Oversize transport with the capacity for more. No evidence that it had the internal bracing for weaponry, or the ability to mount armor
It's weapons could rival or exceed anything in Halo, probably in Trek and many other universes.
EVE's "defensive" plasma rifle, effectively devastated cargo ships with contemptuous ease, wasn't even a real "war" weapon and was also hand-held.
I am scared to think what a full on dreadnought sized BnL plasma cannon could do.
Also these vessels would have advanced energy shields, as energy barriers are a very common feature throughout the entire ship in innumerable types, variations and use cases.
@@YanBaoQin
That thing broke through debri field right after braking its FTL and then landed on a planet with gravity without a scratch. Such a trick would tear most sci-fi ships to atomic dust.
@@YanBaoQinit literally is faster and more durable than any other ship, it is designed to exist forever
@TheArklyte I retract my statement about the armor, you make a great point about its structural robustness and evidence of its armor
Now I want to watch Wall-E again.
Probably still my favorite Pixar movie, it was amazing when it came out, it is still amazing today.
Same here. It’s always been the goat for me.
And the Burn-E short clip?
@@toddkes5890 ...! I didn't know about that. I'm going to watch it immediately, thank you!
The Ferengi would absolutely love this ship class and their constant advertisements to buy buy buy.
Except that as near as I can tell, everything was included in the ticket price. That is, nobody has paid for a damn thing aboard the _Axiom_ since it left port. No humans (aside from the captain) has done any work in their lives, but the _Axiom_ continues to cater to their whims.
@@boobah5643 there was probably some kind of shopping going on at first, simply due to the sheer amount of shops and the existence of different accommodation classes, but it seems currency was just phased out until everything was gone but consumerism
The Templin Institute: so legendary they make two WALL-E videos back to back
Two robots falling in love? Now that's a movie!
Man, you guys are really covering more of Wall-E. This is such an interesting list of lore that I never realized was there.
Man, i feel like one of those people, again, I am not sure if you guys will see this and it's definitely off-topic from the video, but what if you guys did an episode about the Blue Mermaids from High School Fleet/Haifuri?
Wow they’re just on a Wall-E thing right now. Next up is a Dossier on Dr Heinz Doofenshmirtz.
Unironically would love that
Dear God, yes please! A breakdown of Doofenshmirtz Evil Incorporated.
Would hope if it true it will be in collab with Dan (the voice for doff and creator of the series )
Do it and do it with Dan
I would totally watch that
The literal meaning of the word "Axiom" is something that is taken for granted, reflecting on the Axiom population's over-indulgent lifestyle.
I gotta say, for a kid-friendly movie, WALL-E has some impressive technology. I can't believe I didn't check this vid out sooner.
I honestly love that movie so much, its just a truly different take on how well you can make a movie that both is marketed towards kids while having a very interesting and entertaining story for all ages.
Artwork at 1:17 shows the ship class retained the bulbous bow (blue-painted part of the hull) as if it's a holdover from the original ocean-faring liners that starliner class is based from
I like that it's designers are paying homage to stuff like this
I know this isn’t Star Wars but the Axiom looks like it could be a Rebel ship
R.I.P the empire I guess
Nah, it looks too sleek and "modern" to be in a resistance force.
I'm guessing it's due to the rounded design focus it shares with various Mon Cal cruisers used as the rebel's command ships.
People always talk about how the Excelsior class was in service for 130 years or something like that, but imagine the NX class still being in active continuous service during the time of Discovery S3. Like damn.
Bro just imagine if this thing was in Star Wars the Separatist would’ve retrofitted this thing in a heartbeat.
Never imagined a Templin on Wall-E but hey I'm very happy you guys did it.
Gene Roddenberry envisioned the future with starships maintained by a crew and a captain.
"Wall-E" envisions what the future is most likely going to be, no crew and a token captain.
what a great video, i really liked the prison comparison at the end, and how serious you take this, that every universe has the same level of respect and serious thought trough in the videos, very nice.
Thankyou for this man, you dont know how much this made my day.
You have to admit, the Axiom was still a remarkable feat of starship design that lasted a very, very long time in space.
Next we should see an entry on the Omnidroids from the Incredibles.
Fascinating to imagine aliens coming across one of these ships millennia from now and discovering the bizarre graveyard of a luxury ship with extinct passengers and robots not sure what to do
I believe there were more ships of the type just the Axiom, if I remember correctly from what we're shown in the movie. I wonder what happened to them, did they return to earth or are they still out there? What became of them and did any manage to come out of the constant consumption and try for something more?
I like it when non-destructive weapons or ships get attention
I’ve always found curious that the first generation just… stayed there. What happened after the first five years? How did people react? People started rioting just a few months into COVID, I’m surprised that there weren’t any riots or a civil war. None of the captains considered traveling to another world to colonize?
as for the last part, the ships were not intended for interstellar travel, while they could harvest water and resources from the Kuiper belt, if they attempted interstellar travel, they would run out of resources and die
By the time the Earth was devastated, the Human race was a blindly obedient consumerist group, that couldn't put one and one to make 2 if all of them tried.
In many ways they weren't different from cattle, except that they lived a life of fabricated luxury with nothing to change their perspective or even a desire to even try.
By this standard, the captain's where more or less the sole exception, having slightly more free will and initiative than the rest of the race combined.
@@roaringbeardragon4531 Probably not, the ship can jump the 49 AUs from the kuiper belt to earth within about a 30 seconds, and 49 AUs is about 6.75 light hours, so the ship can theoretically travel at over 800 times the speed of light.
Given the nearest star is 4.3 light years away, the axiom traveling at top speed could get there is exactly 2 days, at the "hyper jump speed"
And it can cross the entire galaxy's diameter in about 110 years. And it would take 3000 years to get to the nearest galaxy (not possible from the films 700 year timespan, but given the ship lasted that long with no problems, im sure it could hold out for a couple thousand more years)
Edit: the 30 seconds is only the on screen time, it may be longer, only cut for our viewing pleasure, if it was, it would make my travel time numbers take longer, but even if it took less than 3 hours (probably only still a few minutes), it would still be twice as fast as the speed of light, making the trip to alpha centuri in less than 2 years, still nothing compared to real tech.
@@roaringbeardragon4531 In the movie we see that the Axiom is parked near the Horsehead Nebula, nearly 1400 light years from Earth.
In any case, planet Earth with an atmosphere, loads of (maybe dirty/evaporated) water and garbage heaps (hey! lots of resources on the surface!) is a better alternative for (re)colonization than some bare rock planet with no atmosphere, no water, minerals (need volcanism in the planet's past) and hydrocarbons such as oil
Don't know why, but every time they break some fictional starship down into meters length, it always sounds smaller to me. Versus the description of the Babylon 5 station at 5 miles in length, and the JMC Red Dwarf at 6 miles long.
Does it help if I say the Axiom is almost 3 miles long? :p (Well, that’s dressing up 2.5, but shush)
@@kaitlyn__L It actually does! The Enterprise D and E aren't even half a mile long, so that puts it in perspective :)
@@ConsolasEight somehow I’d misremembered the D as 0.6mi (1km), not 0.4. Damn! I’m miles native too, but “100kph= 60mph; 80kph = 50mph” is buried deep in my brain so I’m fine with km as well
To be fair, it goes without saying that there's something impressive for being small and still having a large capacity - like, that speaks to a level of space efficiency that is kind of insane.
I can’t believe Disney gave us 4 Car movies and only 1 Wall-E. Take us back for a visit to earth please.
Luxury ship turned generation ship. Nice.
"The jewel of the BNL fleet, the Axiom! Spend your five-year cruise in style, waited on 24 hours a day by our fully automated crew. While your captain and autopilot chart a course for non-stop entertainment, fine dining and with our all-access hoverchairs, even Grandma can join the fun! There's no need to walk! The Axiom......putting the 'star' in 'executive starliner'!"
It's amazing to think how she was able to remain pristine and fully functional for seven centuries with the capacity to continue in identical fashion for many centuries more. BNL really built her to last.
"Welcome to the Axiom, have a look around. Anything that brain of yours can think of can be found."
Im curious if other ships were this automated. There could be dozens of human ships out there that didn't collapse into infantile luxury
all ships were automated this way because it was originally supposed to be a "5 year cruise" where everyone could relax and have their needs met.
Then there's me who just realized that to move the entire human population of world you'd need btw more than 20 to atleast 10,000 of these depending on how screwed humanity was in this timeline
Depends on population, but if it was only Axiom class, it would indeed be around 10k, assuming a Human population of 6 billion.
But I've seen drawings of smaller ships, probably between half and a third as capable, so the actual fleet was closer to 50k when all was said and done from the different classes of ships.
they should have made systems that repurposed the trash into a source of energy or broken it down to a harmless state. If they were really creatively smart, the trash could have been used in the construction of ships.
16,667 acording to my caculations of 10 billion humans by 2100
One thing that I wish we knew is if the captain ever made contact with other star-liners to come back to Earth. I'd imagine some horror scenarios where some Axiom Type Star-liners went silent due to technical failures or other sorts of space phenomenon
I was wondering the same thing surely it wasn’t just one ship but rather the last ship to survive
Each Axiom Class can hold up to 600,000 people and not in cramped conditions either which is impressive. Assuming that the entire population of earth was evacuated, and using some rather crude math i chucked in a calculator so take it with a grain of salt, calculated to be 208,843,191,127, divided by 600,000 assuming that its a hard 600,000 cap means that BNL would have to have built over 348,000 axiom class starliners......i honestly wouldn't be surprised if they pulled it off.
"It saved mankind once when it left, and again when it returned"
Goosebumps. 6:58
Such a cool ship design! One of my favourites.
Now imagine autopilot coming full rogue servitor run, just fleet of pampering robots, flying from planet to planet, abducting everyone onboard and commencing mandatory pampering, and for determined exterminators? Army of EVE leaping and flying all around.
Pretty sure whoever designed this ship was looking at the Poseidon (2006) because a lot of the lines and external aesthetics look pretty similar. Which is a nice reference.
Everyone is happy till Axiom casually finds a helix shaped monument floating in space.
Algorithm led me to your channel and I just have to say, that little Templin BIOS intro is super detailed and very pleasant to look at. I'm a big fan.
One thing i noticed is that after roughly 700 years the space junk is still orbiting around Earth.
That in fact couldn't happen because every satellite that is currently in orbit will fall back on Earth one day or another (though considering every satellite at a maximum height of 800 kilometres in orbit, because beyond that space junk takes up to a thousand year or more to eventually fall down and crash)
Imagine a Dead space like game on a broken-down or derelict Axiom.
given BnL's complete disregard for recycling, it's a miracle that ship sustained life for 700 years. We briefly see the garbage disposal section of the ship and it has at least two jumbo Wall-E units seemingly shoveling tons of garbage out into space every day, completely unsustainable. We have to assume these guys were heading towards a very sudden, very catastrophic failure.
I'd completely forgotten about that part. Without recycling they must have some way of replenishing mass or else the ship would simply run out of material.
Only idea I can come up with is they send robots out to collect materials from asteroid or nebula.
There are alot of trash that are completely unrecyclable and there are also people waste to consider.
@@AureliusLaurentius1099 Bruh?? Like what exactly?
Also people waste is literally the most recycleable waste there is. Y'all heard of a sewage treatment plant?
Great to see such an informative video around the vessel from one of my favorite films of all time. Just about all the facts presented here are accurate.
I just realize that the film's about 15 yo now. Which makes these two episodes more sense.
Axiom is really impressive, 700 years in the punishing space environment and no sign of degradation… for reference, ISS was only designed for 10 years of service, it’s now pushing it at 25, and given current political circumstances, it probably won’t get past 30…
I hope the Templin Institute eventually covers the Space Pirates from Metroid. So many things could be discussed, like the Metroid domestication programs, tactics, and experiments.
Metroid has a lot to offer to the Institute
Still one of the greatest robot movies of all time. 💗
I remember having a paper craft model of this ship
The fact that humanity was able to develop these ships really makes you question why they didn't expand and colonize to other planets. If the Axiom was capable of returning to Earth in a few minutes, as seen in the movie, humanity could've long colonized other planets and solar systems. The Axiom was able to relocate itself from the Horsehead Nebula, which is at a distance of 1,500 light years from Earth, in a reasonable amount of time. Taking this into consideration, it makes you really think where humanity could've been if BNL recognized the true magnitude of what they created with these ships.
The computer controled the ship
People were just sheep believeing what the computer said
It’s interesting on how when one prioritizes comfort over necessity that can lead to different outcomes.
What do they mean by “Shrinking Global Real Estate Reserve?”
Also there were classes other than the Axiom formally the “Executive Starliners.”
Let's be real here, Those fitness centers have not been used in centuries
Woah... I really love the first opening of this video, it is like a good animation for opening a high-end super computer, I love it! And yet yeah, It's very remarkable that the Axiom ship can manage to reach that point of years that have passed yet the ship is still all good! Like I'm still curious, how can that manage to be powered over hundreds of years? And also it is quite sad that most people inside don't realise that they are in a prison... But still, it served its purpose!
"B is for Buy n' Large, your very best friend."
Boldly go and push the boundaries...i see what you did there!
You can tell that Wall-E was the movie of the week this week at the Templin Institute. All those field agents pulled off of their crucial off-world assignments, to watch this film in anticipation for a full investigation to that universe.
"the axiom type starliners housed many fitness centres"
Doesn't seem like the people living in the star cruisers used them in any way, shape or form given they look like they've just eaten an entire boulder for breakfast with a side of black holes and literal stars, they are definitely more dense than a white dwarf star
3:30 "Fitness centers"😂
This was brilliant. Liked and Subscribed
Cool ship
Weaponise it
These Wall-E videos makes me wonder what happened to the other Axiom Starliners cause there was more than just the one if the in-movie ads are truthful.
Here's hoping for some Gundam or other mecha anime. I would assist in that if you need an expert.
They apparently all returned to earth as well
@@dantewilliams2757 Pixar should've displayed that in the credits. Being welcomed by those that already arrived.
@@SwiftGundam
I think there is one artwork in the credits that depicts multiple craft descending.
@@SwiftGundam
Nope! I just watched the whole end credits sequence again and at no point is my previous statement made true. The animation depicts probably 100-300 years passage of time and there is no mention of the other starships.
Dang...
@@kjj26kyeah I swear I just saw it too... But no trace in the end credits...
I have to give it to Buy 'N Large, they certainly didn't embrace planned obcelescence and instead created a ship that would last nearly a millenium.
"It saved Mankind once when it left, and again when it return" goes hard.
I have waited for this episode for years.
bro, imagine if BnL ever had to go to war, i cant imagine what they would make for a defensive or an offensive war
I wish there was more lore on the other BNL star liners. We know about the Axiom, but what happened to the dozens of other star liners? Maybe some were lost in space. Maybe some went on to colonize other planets. Maybe some are still continuing their leisurely existence. Did any return to Earth after the events of WALL-E?
I believe they're still in space under order A-113. I get an All Tomorrows feeling when you have normal humanity who return from Axiom and compare to those who stayed in space, further evolving.
@@longdogmurph Every year, the Axiom sent EVEs to earth to check on its habitability. If the other star liners also had EVEs, surely they’d discover the new vegetation planted by the Axiom humans. The auto pilots of the other ships would still obey A113, but maybe the humans on the other ships would shut down the auto pilots and go back to earth.
@@longdogmurph If those other Starliners sent their EVEs, then I'm pretty sure they would automatically return to Earth. Assuming the Control AI doesn't rebel.
@@imsomewhatcertain1024 but they wouldnt. you gotta remember the only reason why the axiom was even able to return was because of 1 anomaly the autopilot wasnt able to control: wall e. if wall e hadnt gone to the axiom, auto wouldve just thrown the plant away first chance he got without anything else to interfere with the a113 directive.
1:25 : The "Epiglottis" class? As in, the little flap that covers your windpipe when you swallow? Yes, very confidence inspiring. 😂
Makes me curious if after the humans that returned to earth kinda re setup shop, did they attempt to reach out to the other Axium ships still out there and tell them its time to return as well?
Some believe one ship successfully activating the return would of sent out a return command to all of the rest of the fleet, but some say some ships probably landed on other world's before A1-13 for one reason or another
we get a brief glimpse of ~several hundred years after the axiom landed that shows earth gets cleaned up and recolonized. the other ships are more likely still on their routes. the only reason why the axiom was able to return was because of wall e. wall e disrupted things enough to create a domino effect being the 1 aspect auto had no control over.
7:20 the thing is it could be made to colonize other planets at some point just need to fix the earth first. And no buy n large as well.
The biggest plothole: why space? They could have just built these things as luxury bunkers on earth
That’s not a plothole at all? A bunker on earth would have actually been worse it would have delayed the cleaning process, caused mental health problems, bone structure problems and it would have been harder to build bunkers in the state the earth was in, the axiom ships were prebuilt they were used as space cruisers before the evacuation of earth