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| Toy Story | |
|---|---|
| Promotional poster for Toy Story | |
| Directed by | John Lasseter |
| Produced by | Bonnie Arnold Ralph Guggenheim Ed Catmull Steve Jobs |
| Written by | Story: John Lasseter Pete Docter Andrew Stanton Joe Ranft Screenplay: Joss Whedon Andrew Stanton Joel Cohen & Alec Sokolow |
| Starring | Tom Hanks Tim Allen Don Rickles Jim Varney Wallace Shawn John Ratzenberger Annie Potts John Morris Erik von Detten |
| Music by | Randy Newman |
| Release date(s) | November 22, 1995 |
| Running time | 80 min. |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $30 million |
| Gross revenue | Domestic: $191,773,049 Worldwide: $354,300,000 |
| Followed by | Toy Story 2 |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Toy Story is a 1995 CGI animated feature film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures and Buena Vista Distribution It grossed $191,773,049 in the United States and it took in a grand total of $354,300,000 worldwide. It is the first film in the Pixar canon.
The primary characters are toys in the room of a nine year-old boy, Andy, and the film is mostly told from the toys\' point of view. Andy, his baby sister Molly, and his mother have smaller roles, along with the neighbor boy Sid, his dog named Scud, and his sister Hannah.
In 2003, the Online Film Critics Society ranked the film as the greatest animated film of all time.Top 100 Animated Features of All Time at the Online Film Critics Society website. In 2005 the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. In 2007, the film was ranked #99 on the American Film Institute\'s 10th Anniversary Edition of the 100 greatest American films of all time, one of only two animated films on the list, the other being Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
The film is set for re-release in 3-D on October 2, 2009, leading up to the long-awaited release of Toy Story 3 on June 18, 2010.
Contents |
The story begins with a boy named Andy playing with his toys, such as a Mr. Potato Head, Rex (a plastic dinosaur toy), and his favorite toy, Woody, a cowboy. He takes Woody into the living room and plays with him some more, with a short interruption talking to his mom about his birthday party later that day and the upcoming move to a new house. After playing with Woody, Andy starts helping his mom by carrying his baby sister to her. While he is gone, all the toys come to life.
The human party makes all the toys extremely nervous, wondering if Andy will get a toy that will replace them--especially with the news that the family will be moving soon. Woody sends the small green soldiers downstairs to spy on the party. At the end of the party, Andy\'s mom pulls out a surprise gift from a nearby closet, which turns out to be a Buzz Lightyear action figure. Buzz does not seem to be aware that he is a piece of plastic, believing himself to be a real space ranger, on a mission to save the universe from Evil Emperor Zurg. The other toys take to him immediately, being impressed by his many features. Only Woody is unconvinced, showing jealousy towards Buzz, who might replace him as Andy\'s favorite toy.
Andy is given a surprise trip to his favorite restaurant: Pizza Planet. However, he can take only one toy with him. Knowing this, Woody tries to shove Buzz behind Andy\'s dresser, but instead inadvertently knocks him out the window. When the other toys learn of Woody\'s actions, they think he has turned into a killer. They try to attack him without even giving him a chance to explain, but he is rescued when Andy, unable to find Buzz, takes Woody on the trip. At a stop at a Dinoco gas station for gas, Woody finds that Buzz grabbed a hold of the family\'s minivan and is with them. Woody tries to apologize but Buzz won\'t listen and throws the first punch. The two begin a fist fight, knocking each other out of the minivan, and are left behind when it drives away. Woody convinces Buzz to hitch a lift on a Pizza Planet truck, in order to return to Andy.
Woody finds Andy there, but Buzz, still believing he is a real space ranger, climbs into a toy crane game, thinking it is a spaceship that will take him to his rival\'s location. Woody goes in after him, but the two are eventually found by Sid Phillips, who lives next door to Andy and is known to torture and destroy toys for his own entertainment.
Left alone in Sid\'s room, Woody and Buzz come upon a group of mis-matched toys, the results of Sid\'s many "experiments." Woody and Buzz react in fear, thinking that the mis-matched toys are cannibals. Meanwhile at Andy\'s house, the toys continue to look for Buzz in the bushes. But when Andy and his mother come home, he notices that Woody is gone. The other toys wonder what has become of the two. Some are worried for both Buzz and Woody, while others express their hope that Woody has met a bad end. The next day, at Sid\'s house, Woody and Buzz, having been mistreated by Sid, (Sid managed to burn Woody\'s forehead with a magnifying glass) try to escape, only to run into Sid\'s maniac dog, Scud. Eventually getting out of Sid\'s room, Buzz comes upon a television where he sees a commercial for the Buzz Lightyear line of toys. Watching it, he realizes that Woody was right. He was a toy this whole time, not a space ranger. In one last desperate attempt to prove he is not a toy, Buzz attempts to fly out of a window by jumping from the guardrail of the stairs on the second floor, only to fall to the floor, losing his left arm in the process. He is then found by Sid\'s sister Hannah, who takes him and puts him with her tea party.
Woody finally finds Buzz in Hannah\'s room, dressed as "Mrs. Nesbitt" and attending a tea party. Woody formulates a plan of escape. The plan involved throwing a string of Christmas lights to the toys in Andy\'s room. Buzz is too depressed to care. When Woody throws the string of Christmas tree lights across the way to the toys in Andy\'s room, and some of the toys refuse to help him, thinking that Woody killed Buzz. Buzz refuses to back him up so Woody uses his arm to prove that He\'s alright, however Mr. Potato head tricks him into showing the arm and it frigthens them making them think Woody did indeed kill Buzz thus refusing to offer help. The mixed-up toys then return and swarm over Buzz, to Woody\'s alarm. But it turns out they were only repairing him. Before Woody can make friends with them, however, Sid returns with his new acquisition: a firework rocket. He decides to blow up Buzz with it, but is stymied by rainfall.
Overnight, Woody and Buzz make amends, Woody helping Buzz come to terms with being a toy, and the two try to escape. Unfortunately Sid wakes up and takes Buzz out to blow him up, leaving Woody alone in the room. Of course, it was also when Andy and his family is going to move. Andy, still depressed to lose Woody and Buzz, finds only the cardboard spaceship of Buzz and his cowboy hat. Woody calls out to the mixed-up toys to tell them a plan to escape. After a daring escape through the house and past Scud, Woody and the other toys end up in the backyard with Sid. They decide to break the "rules" by allowing Sid to see that they can move on their own. Woody even speaks to him through his voicebox, telling him that his toys are sick of being tortured, then with his own voice tells him to "play nice." This freaks Sid out and he runs screaming into the house, with a now acquired fear of toys. Hannah takes advantage of this then frightens him with her toy doll.
Now freed from Sid, Woody and Buzz attempt to catch Andy\'s moving van just as it is pulling away from the house. After saying farewell to the mixed-up toys, a harrowing chase follows, with Scud chasing them and Andy\'s toys not helping, since they still believe Woody intentionally got rid of Buzz. Luckily, they get rid of Scud and let the toys believe in Woody to see that he is helping Buzz. Eventually, with the help of R/C, Andy\'s remote control car, and strategic use of Sid\'s rocket, Woody and Buzz return to Andy, whose mother thinks they were in the car all along.
At Christmas, we see a scene similar to the birthday party, with the toys less worried about the new ones, save a slightly nervous Buzz. Mr. Potato Head is pleased to learn that Andy\'s baby sister has been given a Mrs. Potato Head. When discussing being replaced by a new toy, like Woody was almost replaced by Buzz, Woody poses the question to Buzz, "What could Andy possibly get that is worse than you?" The answer comes in the form of Andy\'s first present, when a dog\'s bark is heard (In Toy Story 2, it is revealed that his name is Buster).
| This section does not cite any references or sources. (February 2008) Please improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
Toy Story began its life as an extension of Pixar\'s short Tin Toy, which featured Tinny, a mechanical drummer who tries to find his way in a baby\'s play room. The original plot called for Tinny to butt heads with a ventriloquist\'s dummy. Ultimately, Tinny was found to be too immobile for the storyline and he was developed as a "space toy", first named Lunar Larry, but eventually becoming Buzz Lightyear. Meanwhile, the original ventriloquist\'s dummy was designed to be sneaky, mean and borderline evil. When tests proved that the character was too unsympathetic, his character was gradually modified until he became the Woody of the film.
During the time of production Robin Williams was in a heated battle against Disney (for more details see Aladdin) and agents everywhere were advising their clients not to do the film.
Other changes the film underwent during development include:
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Tom Hanks | Woody |
| Tim Allen | Buzz Lightyear |
| Don Rickles | Mr. Potato Head |
| Jim Varney | Slinky Dog |
| Wallace Shawn | Rex |
| John Ratzenberger | Hamm |
| Annie Potts | Bo Peep |
| John Morris | Andy Davis |
| Erik von Detten | Sid Phillips |
| R. Lee Ermey | Sarge |
| Sarah Freeman | Hannah Phillips |
| Laurie Metcalf | Mrs. Davis |
| Penn Jillette | TV Announcer |
| Jack Angel | Additional Voice |
| Spencer Aste | Additional Voice |
| Greg Berg | Additional Voice |
| Lisa Bradley | Additional Voice |
| Kendall Cunningham | Additional Voice |
| Debi Derryberry | Troll / Voice on Intercom at Pizza Planet |
| Cody Dorkin | Additional Voice |
| Bill Farmer | Additional Voice |
| Craig Good | Additional Voice |
| Gregory Grudt | Additional Voice |
| Danielle Judovits | Additional Voice |
| Sam Lasseter | Additional Voice |
| Brittany Levenbrown | Additional Voice |
| Sherry Lynn | Additional Voice |
| Scott McAfee | Additional Voice |
| Mickie McGowan | Additional Voice |
| Ryan O\'Donohue | Additional Voice |
| Jeff Pidgeon | Aliens |
| Patrick Pinney | Additional Voice |
| Phil Proctor | Additional Voice |
| Jan Rabson | Additional Voice |
| Joe Ranft | Lenny the Binoculars |
| Andrew Stanton | Additional Voice |
| Shane Sweet | Additional Voice |
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Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
There were several video games based on Toy Story, including:
There were also some "activity" titles released by Disney for the PC and Mac:
All these titles are significant, because Pixar created original animations for all of them, including fully animated sequences for the PC titles.
The film has 100% fresh rating at rottentomatoes.com. All 43 reviews on the site were positive. It had an average score of 8.8/10. The film\'s successor Toy Story 2 also has a 100% fresh rating.
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| Preceded by Knick Knack | Pixar Animation Studios animated films 1995 | Succeeded by Geri\'s Game |
| Joss Whedon | |
|---|---|
| Television - Written & Directed | Buffy the Vampire Slayer · Angel · Firefly · Dollhouse |
| Television - Written or Directed | Roseanne · Parenthood · The Office |
| Films - Written & Directed | Serenity |
| Films - Written | Buffy the Vampire Slayer · Speed · Waterworld · Toy Story · Twister · Alien Resurrection · Titan A.E. · X-Men · Atlantis: The Lost Empire |
| Comics - Written | Fray · Tales of the Slayers · Tales of the Vampires · Serenity: Those Left Behind · Serenity: Better Days · Buffy: Season 8 · Angel: After the Fall · Astonishing X-Men · Runaways |
| Toy Story | |
|---|---|
| Feature films | Toy Story (awards) · Toy Story 2 (awards) · Toy Story 3 |
| Spin offs | Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins · Buzz Lightyear of Star Command |
| Characters | Sheriff Woody · Buzz Lightyear · Emperor Zurg · Sid Phillips · List of characters |
| Video games | Toy Story 2: Buzz Lightyear to the Rescue · Toy Story 2: Action Game |
| Directors | John Lasseter · Ash Brannon · Lee Unkrich · Michael Arias |
| Attractions | Buzz Lightyear · Toy Story Mania |
| See also | Pixar · The Walt Disney Company · You\'ve Got a Friend in Me |
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