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TOY STORY

Toy Story

Promotional poster for Toy Story. From left to right: Bo Peep, Woody, Mr.Potato Head, Troll, Hamm, Buzz Lightyear, Sarge, Slinky Dog, Rex.
Directed by John Lasseter
Produced by Bonnie Arnold, Ralph Guggenheim; executive producers: Edwin Catmull, Steve Jobs
Written by story by John Lasseter & Pete Docter & Andrew Stanton and Joe Ranft;
screenplay by Joss Whedon & Andrew Stanton & Joel Cohen and Alec Sokolow
Starring Tom Hanks
Tim Allen
Don Rickles
Jim Varney
Wallace Shawn
Music by Randy Newman
Editing by Robert Gordon
Lee Unkrich
Distributed by Buena Vista Pictures
Release date November 22, 1995 (U.S.)
Running time 81 minutes
Country United States
Awards Academy Awards: Special Achievement Award to John Lasseter.
Nominations: Best Music, Original Musical or Comedy Score; Best Music, Original Song; Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen
Language English
Budget $30 million
Gross Domestic: $191,773,049
Worldwide: $358,100,000
Followed by A Bug's Life (1998)
IMDb profile

Toy Story is a computer-generated imagery (CGI) animation film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures and Buena Vista Distribution in the United States on November 22, 1995, and the United Kingdom on 22 March 1996.

Toy Story was the first feature-length completely computer-animated movie released by Disney. At least one earlier attempt to create a computer animated feature had been tried before Toy Story, the announced movie The Works, which was never finished. Toy Story was also Pixar's first feature film. It grossed $191,773,049 in the United States, making it the 77st highest-grossing movie in U.S. box office history and it took a grand total of $358,100,000 worldwide, the 99th highest in world history. The primary characters are toys in the room of the six-year-old boy Andy, and is mostly told from their point of view. Andy, his baby sister Molly and mother have smaller roles, as do the neighbor boy Sid, his dog Scud and sister Hannah.

Before Pixar's entry into the feature film-business with Toy Story, Pixar was known for developing the Pixar Image Computer.

Contents

Voice cast

Actor Role
Tom Hanks Woody
Tim Allen Buzz Lightyear
Don Rickles Mr. Potato Head
Wallace Shawn Rex
Jim Varney Slinky Dog
John Ratzenberger Hamm
John Morris Andy
Erik von Detten Sid
Annie Potts Bo Peep
Sarah Freeman Hannah
R. Lee Ermey Sergeant
Laurie Metcalf Andy's Mom
Jeff Pidgeon Green Aliens
Joe Ranft Lenny the Binoculars

Plot

The movie starts with a meeting among the toys to discuss Andy's family's upcoming move, at the end of which Woody announces that Andy's birthday party is that day, resulting in pandemonium from the other toys. Everyone is afraid they will be replaced. Woody, of course, remains calm since he is Andy's favorite and expects to never be replaced by another toy.

To calm everyone Woody sends a reconnaissance group of green plastic soldiers using a baby monitor to scout the party. There are no new toys at the party until mom pulls out another box, but the soldiers are cut off and they don't hear what it is, only that the kids are coming upstairs. All the toys rush to their places before Andy returns.

When Andy arrives, Woody is brushed out of his place - the middle of the bed - and onto the floor to make space for the new toy. Once the kids leave to eat cake, Woody climbs back on the bed to see who this is that could have displaced him. The mystery toy is the famous Buzz Lightyear action figure.

A conflict between Woody and Buzz develops with Woody's jealousy that Buzz displaces him, and his irritation with the fact Buzz does not know he is a toy; Buzz believes himself to be "the real Buzz Lightyear," on a mission against the evil Emperor Zurg. Woody sets a trap for Buzz to knock him between Andy's desk and the wall, ensuring that Woody is picked to be taken to Pizza Planet. The plan goes awry and Buzz ends up falling out of the window. Woody is reviled by most of the toys, who refuse to believe that it was an accident, for this act of treachery, and Buzz sneaks into the car.

The two fight when Andy's mother stops at a Dinoco gas station (which is where Woody delivers his famous "YOU ARE A TOY!!" line), and realize that they must work together to get back to Andy. They sneak onto a truck and reach Pizza Planet, but Sid captures them in a crane game, and takes them home, where they see that Sid often took toys apart and put their parts onto others (these are known as the Mutant toys) For example, an erector-set spiderbaby (Babyface). His plan for Buzz involves strapping him to a rocket and shooting him "into outer space."

However, rain delays the launch to the day of Andy's moving away. Woody recruits the help of the Mutant toys to help Buzz. A plan takes effect- Sid's dog is distracted while Woody allows Sid to take him. Woody begins speaking to Sid, and tells him to take better care of his toys, at which point the toys reveal themselves from their hiding spots, scaring Sid away and giving him a phobia of Toys (how long is unknown). Woody frees Buzz, and chases after the moving truck. Woody gets on, but while the toys are still angry with him for what he did to Buzz, they eventually have Andy's remote controlled car help the two catch up to the truck. The remote control car runs out of batteries, but Woody realizes that Buzz's rocket, still duct-taped to his back, can be used to reach the truck. Woody lights the rocket, and Buzz gains altitude with it before flying over the truck and into the car- Andy believes that he has just found the toys when he sees them.

The toys celebrate Christmas at Andy's new house, once again conducting reconnaissance. Woody and Buzz are dismayed to hear that Andy is getting a puppy.

Characters

The main toy characters:

  • Woody - an old-fashioned pull-string cowboy doll. He is Andy's favorite toy, with a special spot on the bed, and as such is the leader of the toys.
  • Buzz Lightyear - a Space Ranger from Star Command. A new plastic toy with an electronic voice, spring loaded wings, laser (a blinking LED) and a rocket ship box. Buzz was a gift at Andy's birthday party from his mother.
  • Mr. Potato Head - a Mr. Potato Head doll by Hasbro, Inc. He is outspoken and sarcastic. The audio commentary on the 10th anniversary DVD jokes that he is an Irish-Catholic.
  • Rex - a plastic Tyrannosaurus rex with a lot of anxiety from an inferiority complex (afraid he is not scary enough).
  • Slinky Dog - a toy wiener dog with a slinky for a mid-section. Very loyal to Woody.
  • Hamm - a wise-cracking plastic piggy bank.
  • Bo Peep - a porcelain shepherdess doll from Molly's Little Bo Peep lamp, Woody's romantic interest.
  • Sarge - a gung-ho commander of an army of plastic toy soldiers. Sarge and his troops frequently help out their fellow toys.
  • Squeeze Toy Aliens - toy aliens that you could win as a prize in a crane machine at Pizza Planet.
  • Lenny - a pair of wind-up binoculars
  • RC - a remote control car
  • Etch - an Etch A Sketch

Human characters:

  • Andy Davis - a six year old boy, owner of Woody and the rest of the toys.
  • Sid Phillips - a hyperactive ten year old boy who delights in torturing toys; he wears a black shirt with a human skull on the front similar to those which are produced by the company zero.
  • Mrs. Davis - Andy's thirty eight year old mom, typical "soccer mom".
  • Hannah Phillips - Sid's frail little sister. Often gets her toys snatched away and tortured by Sid, usually by his removing their heads (as shown in her tea party, in which all characters but herself and Buzz are headless).
  • Molly Davis - Andy's year old baby sister.

Other Characters:

Awards

Director John Lasseter received an Academy Special Achievement Award in 1996 for this film.

In 2005 the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. It is the most recently-made film to receive this honor.

Sequels

Toy Story in pop culture

  • Debian (a Linux distribution) releases are named after characters from this movie. (Sid, Buzz, Rex, Bo, Hamm, Slink, Potato, Woody, Sarge, Etch).
  • In one scene of Finding Nemo, another Pixar film, a Buzz Lightyear toy can be seen on the floor of a dentist's office.
  • The line "You are a sad, strange little man," uttered by Buzz is referenced in The Santa Clause 2, where Tim Allen (the voice actor of Buzz Lightyear) says the same line.
  • In The Warriors video game, a character can be heard muttering, "Mommy, I don't want to ride the pony," in his sleep. Sid says the opposite in his sleep--"...I wanna ride the pony..."
  • In the Illbleed video game, one of the stages, Toy Hunter, heavily parodies Toy Story, among other movies and video games.
  • This movie has also coined the (oxymoronical) phrase, "To Infinity and Beyond!" (though the term "Beyond the Infinite" was prominently used in 2001: A Space Odyssey of 1968).
  • This movie was referenced twice on Tim Allen's sitcom Home Improvement. The first time, two trick-or-treaters come to the door of Tim's house, one dressed as Simba from The Lion King, and the other dressed as Buzz Lightyear. Randy answers the door, and gives the Simba more candy than the Buzz. Note that Jonathan Taylor Thomas, who plays Randy, voiced the young Simba in The Lion King and via archival footage, Kingdom Hearts II. The second time, Tim and his niece Gracie played with a Buzz Lightyear doll.
  • During the end credits of Pixar's 2006 film Cars, a scene from Toy Story is reenacted by toy car versions of Buzz and Woody, playing a toy spaceship car and a Ford "Woody" Wagon, respectively. Tim Allen and Tom Hanks reprised their voices.
    • Woody: You are a toy...car!
    • Buzz: You are a sad, strange little wagon, and you have my pity. Farewell.
  • Shortly after that in the credits of Cars, a scene with Hamm (voiced by John Ratzenberger, who has appeared in every Pixar film to date) is shown, and Mack (Ratzenberger's character in Cars) comments on how good the guy who voiced the piggy bank car is.
  • Also in Cars, the Lightning McQueen's number 95 represents the year Toy Story came out.

Trivia

  • The Pixar logo with the hopping Luxo Jr. does not appear before the film. He appears at the very end of the credits instead.
  • Andy's father never appears in the movie. This has led fans to speculate that Andy's Mother is single.
  • The "Hand" in the Box in Sid's room plays the same music that the toy did from Tin Toy (1988), the short movie that inspired Toy Story.
  • When Woody jumps through the window of the Pizza Planet truck, there is a sticker on it that appear's to be Herbie's famous number 53.
  • Billy Crystal was originally offered the chance to voice Buzz Lightyear.
  • The toy shark, wearing Woody's hat, proclaims, "Look at me, I'm Woody! Howdy howdy howdy!" This references a cowboy-eating vulture in one of Gary Larson's "The Far Side" daily comic strips from the early 1980s: "Hey everyone, look at me, I'm a cowboy! Howdy! Howdy! Howdy!"
  • The toolbox that Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) pushes off the milk crate bears the name "Binford Tools," the name of the company which sponsors Allen's character's show in Home Improvement (1991).
  • "Hakuna Matata" from the Lion King can be heard in Andy's mother's car on the way to their new home, although when Woody and Buzz fall into the van, it stops playing.
  • The original character for Woody was written to be sneaky, mean and borderline evil. He was also supposed to be a ventriloquist dummy, but as it has always been odd for children to play with these dummies, and in fact more common for kids to be scared of them, he evolved to a pull-string cowboy.
  • During the staff meeting at the beginning of the movie, some of the books on the shelf behind Woody are named after some of Pixar's short films, such as Tin Toy and Knick Knack.
  • When Buzz demonstrates flying, he bounces off the ball from Luxo Jr., and is later knocked out of Andy's bedroom window by Luxo, father of Luxo Jr.
  • In the movie's opening scene, Mr. Potato Head says "What are you looking at, you hockey puck?" This is one of Don Rickles' (the voice of Mr. Potato Head) trademark insults. Joe Pesci insults Don Rickles this way on Rickles' previous film, Casino, saying "What are you staring at, you bald-headed Jew Prick?"
  • The license plate number on Andy's minivan is A113.
  • This is the only Pixar film to not feature a previous Pixar short in the standard edition. However, the Toy Box and Gold Collection editions of this film feature Tin Toy.
  • There are numorus references to Star Wars including when Buzz tells Woody that Zurg was building a space station powerful enough to destroy a planet and that he (Buzz) was trying to take the top seceret plans that revealed its one weak spot to Star Command
  • This movie was spoofed in MAD TV. The episode where they show "Sex Toy Story". It was the same premise. Woody (small sex doll) is jealous of the new toy in town, Buzz (the vibrator). Buzz also thinks he's the real thing.
  • When Buzz gets knocked out the window, a nearby toy emits the Wilhelm Scream.

Video games

Three video games based on the film came out on Sega Genesis, Super NES, Game Boy and PC as well as the Sony Playstation.

See also

External links

Pixar Animation Studios
Feature Films: Toy Story (1995) • A Bug's Life (1998) • Toy Story 2 (1999) • Monsters, Inc. (2001) • Finding Nemo (2003) • The Incredibles (2004) • Cars (2006) • Ratatouille (2007) • W.A.L.-E (2008) • Toy Story 3 (TBA)
Short Films: Luxo Jr. (1986) • Red's Dream (1987) • Tin Toy (1988) • Knick Knack (1989) • Geri's Game (1997) • For the Birds (2000) • Mike's New Car (2002) • Boundin' (2003) • Jack-Jack Attack (2005) • One Man Band (2005) • Mater and the Ghostlight (2006)
See also: The Adventures of André and Wally B. • List of Disney theatrical animated features