![]() ![]() This might be my favorite fact on this page. It was more than just a 'toy story', it was a trilogy about the love of a family made of imperfect 'people' working together through love. The Pixar Team Mined Through More Than Two Decades Of Rickles’ Voice Sessions, Outtakes For Other Films, Theme Parks, Toys, etc. Sorry all you 18 and unders, you just dont understand our pain. In Toy Story 4, Mr Potato Head Is Voiced Posthumously By Don Rickles (Who Passed Away In 2017). I think that basically you had to be 4-6 when the first one came out, and have seen all of them in cinema, preferably with your family, in order to get the full emotional impact. My sister who is only four years younger than me didn't get the full input of the university storyline, because she's still two years off. The incinerator isnt the sad part (especially on repeat watches when you know they all live), its the end where he gives all his toys away. I saw the first one when I was 5, the second when I was 11, and the third when I was 20, and I think that even being a few years off that, you don't get quite the same impact. After escaping the trash shredder, All the toys are on another belt that leads to an incinerator. ![]() I was pretty much one of the original Toy Story kids though. The trajectory of Jessie’s previous owner. He decides to take Woody, his favourite toy, and puts the other toys in a trash bag to be stored in the attic. With his toys abandoned through the passage of time and some of them sold off, the toys’ future looks bleak. As he put it to me afterwards 'for a moment I really thought they were going to do it.' There are a few montages in the Toy Story franchise in which a character details how they were abandoned by their previous owner, but Jessie’s is by far the saddest, and it’s all thanks to the song When She Loved Me, written by Randy Newman and recorded by Sarah McLachlan. Andy, now a 17-year-old young man, is heading to college. When Toy Story 3 came out, it had been 11 years since the last movie in the. My mum got hit pretty hard by it because when we saw it I was home for the holiday's just before my third year, so the university parallels hit hard I think.Īs for my dad, who I have literally never seen cry at any movie ever, even he cried at the Incinerator scene. That moment at the incinerator didn’t just have the weight of narrative behind it. When they mentioned that Bo Peep was gone, that was me done.Īs for the rest of my family, I don't know when my sister cried, but I do know that she did, my mother was crying from literally the very beginning, when they were showing the home video footage. I knew going in I was probably going to cry because there hasn't been a single Pixar movie I haven't cried at, but this one floored me almost out of the gate. ![]()
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