You have to realize what a shock to the movie-going public this movie was. We had never seen anything like it. And to top it off it was a good story too! Took my dad to see it on opening night even though he didn't really want to see a "cartoon". But when the movie was over, he leaned over to me and said, "Thank you very much for talking me into going. That was amazing!" RIP, Dad!
The “soullessness” you noticed was actually what brought about the idea of Toy Story, or at least led to it. They knew their tech wasn’t ready to portray humans believably, but they could do plastic/metal textures, and making living toys was a way to overcome the gaps in their tech.
That’s not really weird. In this universe, toys come to life. Suspension of disbelief requires all the rules to make sense within the context of the universe being portrayed. Sounds are still carried as vibrations in the air in this universe, so it breaks an established rule that people can’t hear them.
@@MrTaylork1 but not all of the rules are known are they? Couldn’t it just as easily be suggested that the toys can only be seen or heard when they want to be? It’s a reality where toys are alive when people aren’t looking. Maybe we can’t hear them either…unless they want to be. I’m just throwing that out there. If we accept that they are alive then we can accept that maybe we can’t hear them when one of them falls. In fact since no one seemed to hear that magic 8 ball fall then can’t we assume that it couldn’t be heard? That doesn’t mean I’m right but we can’t look for logic here. The rules are unwritten.
@@UncleQue They actually can't be unwritten rules in movies like this. The writers need to specifically highlight the fantastical parts, because by default everything you don't call out is unconsciously assumed by the viewer to be the same as the real world. That's why the noise thing stands out so much.
@@MrTaylork1 THANK YOU, I can't stand "it's fiction" MFs when they try to excuse lazy writing. Not that this is lazy writing, but it would've been fun if there was an instance or two of someone in the house going up there like... the hell is going on in this room?
The voice of the little green Army man was provided by the late R. Lee Ermey. He was a Marine Corps Drill Instructor, before retiring. He played tough military roles in loads of movies and shows.
Disneyland used to have a rule where any performer in Toy Story costume had to drop to the ground anytime someone would say "ANDY'S COMING!" They stopped that pretty quickly when someone realized how badly people would abuse that...
Tom Hanks, always the consummate professional, would rehearse his lines for hours. He once (or maybe more than that) mentioned in an interview that he was in awe of Tim Allen who would come in, do his lines in one take, and go home. Tim Allen is one of the finest ad lib comedians and doesn't get enough credit for it. When watching Pixar and/or Disney, you have to always be on the lookout for Easter eggs and subtleties in the film as the creators are unbelievably detail oriented. One of my favorite subtle drop-ins in this movie is at time stamp 6:04 when Bo Peep says, "I'm just a couple-a blocks away." as she is walking past three 'blocks'.
Fun fact, Woody was originally going to be the villain of this film but was changed, which explains why Vkuina see's him as a strict, stone-cold dictator over the other toys in the beginning of the film.
Toy Story 2 and 3 are absolutely fantastic. 2 has one of the saddest scenes of all time and 3 has TWO of the most moving scenes of all time. All three TS movies succeeded in making me cry like an idiot.
"Eggman?? Why did they choose THAT as the name for the movers?" Funny you should ask, Vicky. It's an Easter Egg (and yes, I did just come up with that pun on the spot as I'm typing this lol). The art director for the movie is named Ralph Eggleston. It's a nod to him.
@@TheHardStyleLifeUnironically an incredibly boss song. I think it gets meme’d (I could be mistaken; I don’t care about most memes, and I hate meme culture on the whole), but goddamn is it a great piece of music. That whole game is a friggin’ masterpiece. (Sonic Adventure 2 Battle, in case anyone reading doesn’t get the reference.) I really hope to see both Sonic Adventure games hit the Switch at some point, though I don’t know how they’ll manage to incorporate the separate Chao garden data so it still works the same.
Hey Vicki, the genius of Toy Story is that it the taps into so many aspect of being a child through the prism of playing with toys. --------- Andy and Mary play with toys like a normal kids, Sid is demonic with his toy play. ------- Each interaction takes you back to the child like zone when we just begged 5 more minutes.
The voice actors in this movie are legendary: Woody- Tom Hanks Buzz- Tim Allen Mr. Potato Head- Don Rickles Ham- John Ratzenberger The Army Men- R. Lee Ermey Andy’s Mom- Laurie Metcalf There’s easily over 20 Oscars, Emmys, and Golden Globes nominations/winners between these six alone. Edit: If you want a good laugh, watch some of Don Rickle’s roasts.
As a now middle aged man, I can still relate to being around Andy's age and thinking that my toys were alive in some way. I always treated them as if they were and I made sure to take very good care of them. Enough so that I still have the stuffed dog I was given a few days after I was born (I'm 53 now), along with his teddy bear pal and the little pillow that they both share. My doddy (pronounced dough-dee because I couldn't day doggy) will be with me until the day I die.
A fun fact, Joss Whedon who created Firefly helped write this, and John Lassiter one of the producers on this was paid homage in Firefly. His name Lassiter was the laser the crew of Serenity steals with YoSaffBridge
Hamm is played by John Ratsenburger, and he is in every Pixar movie ever made (at the very least, most of them). He's also Mack (Lightning's Truck from Cars), and he's one of the Waiters in Rattatouile, just to name a couple. Another easter egg in every Pixar movie (and in movies by other studios as well) is A113. It's the classroom number for the most popular animation class at CalArts, so a lot of animation studios like to put it somewhere, most often a license plate like in Toy Story, Lilo and Stitch, and The Iron Giant.
_Toy Story_ belongs in a very elite club I call "landmark films." They're landmarks because film making was one way before these movies came out and it was forever different after. Some landmark films include _The Jazz Singer_ (first movie with sound), _The Wizard of Oz_ (first widely distributed color film) and _Jurassic Park_ (first film with realistic CGI animals). _Toy Story_ was proof that a movie could be made from start to finish completely with computers. It's fascinating to watch Pixar's films in release order and see how the CGI gets better and better with each movie.
2:39 it is actually kind of funny how the nicest people are actually the best at acting like villains. There’s even a saying about how the rage of a good person is far worse than the rage of a bad person.
The most chilling thing is when someone so calmly and cooly expresses their anger without shouting… There’s a speech at the start of an episode in the Matt smith era of DOCTOR WHO - “demons run when a good man goes to war…”
Here in italy the Woody Voice was interpreted by Fabrizio Frizzi, a kind-hearted man, a gem of a soul, a famous Italian presenter here for 30 and more years. He' s sadly passed away for a Cancer not so long ago. He gave his voice to Woody in all the films, even in the music "You got a friend in me", and he was invested in those films, because he made happy so many kids and, I repeat, Frizzi Was one of the most kind man I ever seen. For me and for many many Italians here, grown With him and Toy Story, Every time we hear his voice, we tear up a bit.... Thanks to watch this Movie, V!
Ya know how everyone has that one movie they watched 1,000 times as a toddler? This was mine. I still know it by heart, they don’t make ‘em like this anymore!
Not only was this the most creative Pixar movie. It was perfectly put together. Every scene had a purpose. The lines and delivery weren’t forced. There was a lot of show and not tell moments. It was a nice blend of adult humor and kid’s humor that made watching it as a kid feel like a huge deal and not catering to just children. The world was so amazing in the perspective of a toy that is somehow lost in the times. They captured it almost as if it was told in the perspective of an actual kid who loves toys.
Fun Fact: Toy Story was the first full-length 3D / computer generated animation film to be made 🎉 It sure is odd looking, but it's also very impressive knowing it's the first.
@@heitorkawano5124 Exactly, but it didn't had anywhere near the same release reach as Toy Story did. The fact it wasn't an American movie also played against it.
Pixar’s always been boss-basically the more recent equivalent of the OG Disney, Warner Bros., and Hannah-Barbara cartoons. (Before two of those companies became complete disgraces to their own legacies, that is. Yes, I am a *former* Disney and WB fan who now utterly loathes both companies. I still love their older properties, but no longer believe either company is worthy of said properties. I kinda wish Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Bugs Bunny, and Daffy Duck were real beings-just so I could be proven right about how they’d react to what their companies have become.) Honestly, I think this movie still looks pretty damn good overall, aside from a few hiccups in some character movements due to technical limitations. (Eyelid movements, namely. It doesn’t bother me, but it does kinda stand out a bit.) The designs still look pretty clean, and even the appearance of the human characters looks more like a stylistic choice than anything else. Just goes to show that things made well-made by people who actually care about doing a good job-don’t really age much.
There was a 3D animation series sequel to transformers around the same era called BEAST WARS. Being a tv series the budget was a little lower, some animations and environment textures and shapes are a bit wonky, but the character models are epic - well worth a nostalgic watch.
It was a genius move on Pixar's part to have their first ever feature film be about toys that don't have to look convincingly human, considering how primitive the 3D animation technology was at the time and how low-key horrifying the actual human characters ended up looking in this lol
Tim Allen, the voice of Buzz Lightyear, was at one of the heights of his professional career. He had a top rated show on television with Home Improvement, one of the greatest Christmas movies with The Santa Clause, and the first fully computer animated movie with Toy Story. He played Buzz with such dedication that one of his improvised lines is now iconic. In my opinion, Woody was a jerk to Buzz because he never thought that he would be replaced as Andy's favorite toy. Being the favorite garnered Woody a form of seniority within Andy's room. When Woody saw all the other toys give Buzz all the adoration along with feeding Buzz's delusions, Woody couldn't take it any more. The toy adding gasoline to the fire was Mr Potato Head. Potato Head was one of the antagonists in this movie because he knew he wasn't the favorite and did everything in his power to up the contention. Seeing him get hit by RC in the moving van was his comeuppance.
If you believe the theory that Mr Potato Head was Andy’s original favourite before Woody, his fears are somewhat more justified because he knows favourite toys can be replaced since he was once on the other end of it.
For those that don’t know, in Home improvement, Tim Allen played a handyman that had his own TV show called Tool Time. The main sponsor of that fake show was Binford Tools. The tool box that traps woody in Sid’s room was a Binford toolbox. 23:29
Vicki to see your OCD at full display was hilarious. ------- A visit to Sid's bedroom would be like a horror movie scene to you. I couldn't stop laughing.
Toy Story had a very troubled production. Woody was originally written to be a complete asshole to make the film more 'edgy', but the demo reel was a disaster and the film was almost cancelled. John Lasseter took charge and reworked Toy Story into its current state, saving the franchise.
The movie was originally due out in 1993, and had to spend almost two years either creating all new scenes, or reworking finished scenes to cut time by swapping characters out and just lip syncing the new dialog. Much of this movie is sort of a Frankenstein mess, but they pulled it off. Also, the big opening train sequence in Toy Story 3 is how they wanted to open this movie, showing Andy's imagination, but the animation was too primitive. So they took the more simpler route.
With each new Pixar release they upped their game with better visuals. A Bug's Life added depth of field and better textures then Toy Story 2 added even more eye-candy. Toy Story 3, IMO, just blows them all away in every way. It looks amazing and has a truly great story.
It's worth watching the PIXAR shorts as they really show the evolution of computer animation. You can see a bit of the genesis of Toy Story in "Tin Toy", and some like "Knick-Knack" are really entertaining in their own right. I believe that by the time they started to release feature length films, the shorts were testing new features in the rendering software. "For The Birds" was testing the ability to give their models realistic looking fur/feathers etc
Toy Story came out the month after I turned 8. I was living on Colorado with my mom. We had a next door neighbor who was a boy a few years older than me who took me to see it in the theater. I wish I could remember his name, but sadly the only thing I remember about him was I looked up to him because he could eat an entire grilled cheese sandwich in 3 bites! 🤯 Anyway, you're right about the new CGI animation being FREAKY VKunia. I hated it so much actually that I think we had to leave early. And the WHOLE WALK HOME I was crying, wanting my mom, and refusing to walk. So my poor kid neighbor had to drag me home, one big heave at a time as he held me by the hand. I can only imagine how bad that looked to all the cars passing us as we walked home lol. I remember the sidewalk, the heaving, crying, and all the cars passing by super well. Almost 30 years later and I'm really sorry I put you through that as a child dude, wherever you are.
Boys break things cause we want to see how things are made/designed. We are builders. It is easier to put something together if one understands how an object/thing works. Men and women are designed differently. Hope this helps!
I also never thought how the Davis family or the movers are curious why the door and ramp is open and gone. But funny seeing Potato Head gets his comeuppance at the mutiny. And brutalness on Woody. Sure, Woody was possessive of Andy, and didn't want to be replaced, but he changed.
My favorite part about this reaction is how terrified you are with the animation, watching it again as I’m older now I can honestly agree with you on that lmao 😂
I had that feeling with some earlier 3D animated movies, like Shrek or Monsters Inc. too, their animations are somewhat weird to watch nowadays :D It doesn't change the fact them being timeless classics though
What’s great about the other movies is that the 2nd was released 4 years later, 3rd was 11 years after two and 4 was 9 years after three! Time feels like it’s passed from 1-3 but feels like it hasn’t moved between 3 & 4. Also a heads up, the remaining movies have things in the credits.
I don't know when Pixar started it. But they do eventually have "outtakes" during the credits in the future. And they are one of the coolest parts of those movies.
They started doing it with their next film, A Bug's Life. They carried it on into Toy Story 2 and Monsters Inc, but they stopped doing it after that for some reason (maybe it was too expensive to keep doing it)
Little Fun Fact about Sid he is apparently based off of a former employee who has been known to disassemble toys and use the parts to build strange creations.
Rest in peace, Don Rickles, Jim Varney, and E. Lee Ermey (the voices of Mr. Potato Head, Slinky Dog, and Sarge, respectively). This movie was Pixar's first EVER major film they'd done. Make sure you have tissues ready for 2 and 3. Not kidding. Edit: Lightyear and Buzz Lightyear of Star Command are different things. The latter is now considered non-canon with the franchise, and that's why it'll never be on Disney+. Bullcrap on the whole it being not canon! The new Buzz Lightyear film shouldn't be canon! 2nd edit: The first doll that comes outta the sand was originally supposed to say "redrum" as a reference to The Shining, but they changed it. If you ain't seen The Shining, girl, come October, you gotta watch it! Slow film, but it really lets you get to know the main characters, and lemme tell you, Jack Nicholson is the best part of it. Just trust me on that. Final edit: 25:49 - The Exorcist reference. Another recommended film if you have yet to see that.
Yeah and Blake Clark, a close friend of Jim Varney's, took over the slinky dog role for Toy Story 3 which went into production after Varney's death. Toy Story 4 I believe came out after Don Rickles died and they just used alternate takes from the first three to finish his role in that film. R Lee Ermey was the shit.
@@justarandomveryintelligent8934 Nah, it was just stock audio for Mr. Potato Head in Toy Story 4. His role wasn't really that big there. Barry Bostwick was rumored to be taking over, but it was just decided to use archived recordings of Don Rickles from the first film. Key & Peele, on the other hand, now those two were hilarious in that one! "Plush rush!"
"Lightyear and Buzz Lightyear of Star Command are different things. The latter is now considered non-canon with the franchise, and that's why it'll never be on Disney+. Bullcrap on the whole it being not canon! The new Buzz Lightyear film shouldn't be canon!" And sadly, because the staff at Pixar and Disney are just offended by the Buzz Lightyear cartoon that they refused to associate themselves with it and just decided to replace it with that awful origin Lightyear movie that no one asked for. I still miss the cartoon show. 😥
At this point in history, Pixar was its own company and would not be acquired by Disney until 2006. Steve Jobs was head of Pixar, as this was after his first stint at Apple, and before his comeback to Apple. Apple in the mid 90s was dying, until Jobs went back to Apple and revived it in the 2000s.
This was a ground breaking movie that put Steve Jobs (who had left Apple to found Pixar) back on top. It introduced the world to CGI graphics and changed animated films forever. And it happens to be a classic series.
Steve Jobs didn't found Pixar. It started as Lucasfilm's computer division but got spun off into its own company just a year after he left Apple and founded NeXT (which would later get bought by Apple and result in him becoming its CEO for the rest of his life; the NeXTSTEP operating system also ended up becoming the framework for Mac OS X/"macOS" and, in turn, all of macOS's derivative OSes like iOS and watchOS). Jobs provided significant financial backing for the fledgling Pixar, so he quickly became the majority shareholder, which earned him quite a bit of Disney stock when the Mouse bought Pixar (enough that Jobs instantly became Disney's largest shareholder until his death).
Thank you for making me feel old. I was 6 when Toy Story 1 was released. Even if I don't remember watching 1 in the cinemas I do remember watching Toy Story 2 in the cinema and it was so fun! :D
Toy Story's a fun movie. In some ways, I guess it's an extended tech demo as it was the first feature-length CGI movie. I always enjoyed Toy Story 2 more than this one. This is still a lot of fun though!
Fun fact: Pixar as an animation studio was founded in 1979 as a division of Lucasfilm, yes the very Lucasfilm that made Star Wars, and when it was able to be spun off into its own CGI company in 1986 it was able to do so with funding from Steve Jobs, who became a majority shareholder. Pixar wasn't officially part of Disney until 2006, its just that when they finally made this first entry in a feature length animated film, Disney was just their producer on this and two other films after that, though they have worked with Disney before on some sequences of some hand-drawn Disney films like The Rescuers Down Under. Interestingly, the few films after Toy Story were made, there were disagreements between Pixar and Disney.
So interesting fact: They didn't start making toys about this movie until near to the release date, and didn't have enough to meet demand. They even make a small joke about this in the sequel.
because people lie. do you really think there are all of these reaction channels that have never seen all of the most popular movies of the last 40 years
She is either a liar or has been living in a cave up until she started a youtube channel. People are just too stupid to see past it or are just simping for him
@@bauman921 Plenty of people don't watch many movies. Prior to maybe 2015, out of these most popular movies of the last 40 years, I had probably seen maybe 10... 3 of which were the LoTR movies. I've probably seen more in the past decade than in the previous 25 years.
Each film grows in technique. For instance, Finding Nemo improves their water dynamics. You literally watch Pixar get better with CGI in each film. Plus Each film has an easter egg of the next film hidden somewhere in the background. Should watch A Bug's Life before watching Toy Story 2 and so on. -Sage
Yeahhhh, if you're getting into the full quadrilogy, be ready for tears 😂 Toy Story 2 & 3 both have genuine claims to be the greatest sequels ever made - and 4, whilst I personally don't hold it on the same level, is still probably just as good as this original film if you ask me :)
"I never understood a little boy's fascination with destruction, and breaking things. Like, what is satisfying about that?" When you're young, you lack the emotional intelligence to express your feelings and vent your frustrations in a healthy and articulate way. Also, you might just have an excess of energy to expel. These days, there exists places one can go to pay to destroy a room full of destructible items. You can take a sledgehammer to a wall, a bat to some expensive vases and the like. It can be quite therapeutic and stress relieving.
@@emperorwiseman Also no, It's about curiosity and figuring out how things are made. IDK what kind of book you read but for me it wasn't about power or control as a kid. Or lack of some emotional intelligence. You're all crazy.
@@robertc49 I'm sure that was true for you and many others. But there are billions of people with infinite different life situations that serve as motivation for behavior. It's a little weird how you can't comprehend any experience other than your own. What I said wasn't even true for me. I just observed it in others.There isn't just one answer to the question.
I had to rip things apart growing up: an old outhouse, old roof, grandma Reed's house. My career in testing involved a lot of breaking things from throwing equipment off roofs, driving cars over them, etc. Such fun!
after all the years since the movie came out, and the thousands of times i've watched it with my cousin as kids, i still get goosebumps and giddy when Woody says "to infinity and beyond!" .
Toy story 2 carries the quality and spirit of the first movie (but even better IMO) and 3 ends the story in the most perfect way imagineable. To me, those first three films are the only ones worth watching, even though additional ones were made.
Growing up, this was THE movie for me. The VHS came out a month after I was born and I was obsessed. I had tons of Buzz Lightyear toys, even dressed up as Buzz in kindergarten. One of those movies that just gets better with time, despite their technical limitations. I don’t know if I’ll get to have kids one day, but I know if I do, I’m showing them this movie.
She is so fake. I get that people aren't going to see every movie out there but there are way too many movies that she acts like she hasn't seen. I noticed that she will talk a lot in certain reactions which is her tell
A lot of people have pointed out the messiness behind this movie's production, and how it was almost cancelled. When it came to the HD release, that was a huge undertaking. The movie was originally rendered in 1536 × 922 pixels, and then blown up to be shown on 35mm film (~4K), which softened the movie up a lot, hiding a lot of the imperfections. When it came time to make the HD master of Toy Story, much of the software was obsolete and many of the files broken. They basically had to completely reverse engineer the movie using Toy Story 3's animation software, working with people from the original "RenderMan" software team to create a lot of custom plug-ins that could read and animate the original movie's files. In doing this, they also went back and fixed some of the minor lighting issues, color correction, blurry textures, and spots where the animations would clip through things in the original. They essentially had to remake the movie. Same with Toy Story 2.
This was the first feature-length 3D animation movie, VK. This series is bitter-sweet. The sequels were made to grow older with the billions of fans it had since the first. It really is funny, yet heart-breaking at times and oh so nostalgic!
fun fact when the animators came up with the engine used in this movie they couldnt make a person with it because it "felt like they were made of plastic" then they had an ideia of making a movie about plastic toys
Toy Story was something that personally defined my chilhood. The movie was already 2 years old by the time I was born, but growing up in a G-rated household and a sister 4 years older, there was much to watch other than Disney movies and shows. But I'm glad that was the case. "This isn't flying. This is falling, with style" "TO INFINITY AND BEYOND" That scene always brings a bit of a tear to my eye, even at 27 years old and having seen the movie thousands of times by now. Also, if you pay attention to certain parts of the movie, you can notice other references to other movies, such as Buzz and the ultimate weapon Zurg has with only one weakness lol read between the lines with that one lmfao
I hope you do the sequels - the 2nd movie has bloopers and 3rd & 4th movie actually has a couple of mini movies, plus they're very emotional so you might wanna have some tissues 😉🙂
@@AA-cf4esHe gets better, though. And yeah he's kind of a jerk in some other ways, but as far as he knows, his "torture and murder" is just messing around with inanimate objects.
The movie garnered three Academy Award nominations: Best Original Screenplay (making it the first animated feature to achieve this), Best Original Song for "You've Got a Friend in Me," and Best Original Score. It also received a non-competitive Special Achievement Academy Award. In 2005, Toy Story was chosen by the Library of Congress for inclusion in the United States National Film Registry due to its "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" status, making it one of the first nine films to receive this honor in its inaugural year of eligibility.
This film defined my childhood and is my favorite despite the dated animation and technology. Woody and Buzz’s journey from adversaries to unlikely friends is such a fun story and one of the best. It’s amazing what you can do with what you have, just like playing with toys.
I have fond memories of seeing this in the theaters. I brought the VHS release into 3rd grade in 1995 to ask my teacher if we could watch it in class. It was a big deal at the time, and no one could believe that I already had it on VHS. We watched it that week in school 😎 My parents were the best. I was responsible for many movie viewings at my elementary school.
I worked at a group for sixteen years and one of the residents who has autism watched this movie on loop. So I've seen this movie more than any other movie and I still love it. I still watch it on my own from time to time and remember the happiness this film brought to A.
Grew up watching this as early as 3 years old. I watched this over and over and never found anything creepy except for Sid's room. I was obsessed with this movie.
One interesting Easter egg is that the tool box in Sid's room is from Binford. Those are the kind of tools Tim Allen's character uses and endorses on "Tool Time", the show he hosted on the 90s sitcom "Home Improvement".
fun fact: the scene in sids room when the tool box falls off the table you can see Binford written on the side of the tool box. Binford was the Tim Allens tool company on the show Home Improvement
Oh man this takes me back when I was 5 years old and got Toy Story on VHS for Christmas (yes, VHS...). Man I feel old. Everybody back then was so amazed by the fact they did an entire movie in a computer xD
Fun Fact: Joss Whedon (director of Marvel’s The Avengers & creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer), worked on the script, and is the one who came up with the idea to have Buzz not realize he’s a toy, plus created the character Rex… so crazy to think how instrumental he was for two beloved series
Easter Egg: At the time this was made, Tom Hanks was one of the biggest movie stars and Tim Allen was one of the biggest TV stars. Allen was starring in Home Improvement in which he has a cable show called Tool Time, sponsored by Binford Tools. In the scene where Buzz and Woody are in Sid's bedroom and Buzz is pushing the toolbox to free Woody, the name on the toolbox is Binford Tools, a nod to Tim Allen's fictional TV show from Home Improvement.
"I never understood a little boy's fascination with destruction and breaking things. I mean what is satisfying about that?" It's not necessarily just breaking things, but also putting them back together. It's also about finding out and understanding the 'pieces' of a thing. Also sometimes it's just fun to watch something break and collapse, or get blown up. We've all got a bit of Michael Bay in us, I guess. Not sure how to explain it, but yes, destruction is entertaining. Ideally building something should be more entertaining, though.
This movie is so important to me... My dad is like the macho man stereotiype. The guy who wont take shi* from anyone and the whole serious dude. But when i was a kid he knew how much i liked this movie so he used to say to me all the time "to the infinity and beyond" which to me always shows how much he loved me, to quote from a cartoon just to make me happy... So thats a really good memory that i have that was created because of this movie.
In Toy Story 1. Both Hanks and Allen signed up for emotional reasons. They had an emotional reason for assuming the character of Woody too. Hollywood's nicest guy had often wondered whether his toys came alive when he left the room as a child and so felt compelled to help capture kids' imaginations in the same way. This movie is how I got rid all my toys because I watched it when I too young to not understand. =D
Tom Hanks and Tim Allen were quite the dynamic duo in this movie franchise, no one can beat their voice acting. Plus they both have the best lines throughout the movie
"I'm Woody! Howdy howdy howdy" That scene with the shark is always funny. Having R. Lee Ermey -- Gunny -- as Sarge was a brilliant casting decision. 16:22 -- this line has a WHOLE new meaning, when you see Toy Story 3. If you have the chance to go to a Disney park, you need to check out Toy Story Midway Mania. It's a lot of fun.
cute movie, althoug when Sid toys came out of their hiding places and show themselves to Woddy and Buzz, and the "living toys" at the end was friggin scary as a child!! i got goosbumps all over again when Woddy turns 360 his head sayin "We toys can se EEEEEEEEVRYTHIIIIING"
During 4th of July I destroyed so many toys with fireworks. If only I had known eBay was going to be a thing later in life. Those toys probably would have been worth a lot of money. 😭
23:29 I never noticed it before but Buzz is moving a toolbox that's labeled "Binford Tools". That's the company that Tim Allen's character worked for in the TV show Home Improvement LOL
You have to realize what a shock to the movie-going public this movie was. We had never seen anything like it. And to top it off it was a good story too! Took my dad to see it on opening night even though he didn't really want to see a "cartoon". But when the movie was over, he leaned over to me and said, "Thank you very much for talking me into going. That was amazing!" RIP, Dad!
Funny, I dragged my dad to it when I was 10 years old and he slept through the whole thing because he had no desire to see it
The “soullessness” you noticed was actually what brought about the idea of Toy Story, or at least led to it. They knew their tech wasn’t ready to portray humans believably, but they could do plastic/metal textures, and making living toys was a way to overcome the gaps in their tech.
I didn't know that. Thanks.
I had no idea, it makes sense now that you mention it
Yep, it was the first CGI animated movie!
limitation breeds creativity
@@umairasif15 just goes to show Pixar doesn’t need Disney
“He’s keeping the property value down just by existing..”😂😂😂😂 I’ve got a neighbor I’d love to say that to. Thank you 😂😂
15:17 the reflection in Buzz's helmet was such a flex back then.
I like how she fully accepted that toys come to life when nobody is around but the unbelievable part was that no one could hear them moving around.
That’s not really weird. In this universe, toys come to life. Suspension of disbelief requires all the rules to make sense within the context of the universe being portrayed. Sounds are still carried as vibrations in the air in this universe, so it breaks an established rule that people can’t hear them.
@@MrTaylork1 but not all of the rules are known are they? Couldn’t it just as easily be suggested that the toys can only be seen or heard when they want to be? It’s a reality where toys are alive when people aren’t looking. Maybe we can’t hear them either…unless they want to be. I’m just throwing that out there. If we accept that they are alive then we can accept that maybe we can’t hear them when one of them falls. In fact since no one seemed to hear that magic 8 ball fall then can’t we assume that it couldn’t be heard? That doesn’t mean I’m right but we can’t look for logic here. The rules are unwritten.
@@UncleQue They actually can't be unwritten rules in movies like this. The writers need to specifically highlight the fantastical parts, because by default everything you don't call out is unconsciously assumed by the viewer to be the same as the real world. That's why the noise thing stands out so much.
@@MrTaylork1 THANK YOU, I can't stand "it's fiction" MFs when they try to excuse lazy writing. Not that this is lazy writing, but it would've been fun if there was an instance or two of someone in the house going up there like... the hell is going on in this room?
This comment thread has really overlooked the fact that toy story’s target audience is 4 year olds.
Some built in easter eggs in every Pixar film.
-Pixar ball
-Pizza Truck
-John Ratzenburger
-A113, the holy grail of easter eggs
The voice of the little green Army man was provided by the late R. Lee Ermey. He was a Marine Corps Drill Instructor, before retiring. He played tough military roles in loads of movies and shows.
I' m I mistaken or He was also the sargeant in Apocalipse Now? if it is as it, no way the soldiers are good in original language (I' m Italian) :)
Yep the guy from Texas Chainsaw
@@daemonip83 I think so
I only just noticed while watching her react that it was the Gunny's voice.
@@daemonip83 I'm not seeing that listed in his credits on the internet movie database.
Disneyland used to have a rule where any performer in Toy Story costume had to drop to the ground anytime someone would say "ANDY'S COMING!" They stopped that pretty quickly when someone realized how badly people would abuse that...
I think the Army Men castmembers should have posed, instead of dropping to the ground.
Now they just say 'Andy went to college'. Thanks internet!
Tom Hanks, always the consummate professional, would rehearse his lines for hours. He once (or maybe more than that) mentioned in an interview that he was in awe of Tim Allen who would come in, do his lines in one take, and go home. Tim Allen is one of the finest ad lib comedians and doesn't get enough credit for it.
When watching Pixar and/or Disney, you have to always be on the lookout for Easter eggs and subtleties in the film as the creators are unbelievably detail oriented. One of my favorite subtle drop-ins in this movie is at time stamp 6:04 when Bo Peep says, "I'm just a couple-a blocks away." as she is walking past three 'blocks'.
Funny because Tim Allen’s characters name in Galaxy Quest is Jason Nesbitt.
Nesmith. Close enough.
Galaxy Quest sucked!
@@seanstinchfield-mp2xmyou’re opinions are bad and you should feel bad.
@@TheJabbate1 He posted that just trolling for reactions. Don't take the bait. :-)
Fun fact, Woody was originally going to be the villain of this film but was changed, which explains why Vkuina see's him as a strict, stone-cold dictator over the other toys in the beginning of the film.
Yeah he was going to be ruthless kinda like the Governor from TWD
Toy Story 2 and 3 are absolutely fantastic. 2 has one of the saddest scenes of all time and 3 has TWO of the most moving scenes of all time. All three TS movies succeeded in making me cry like an idiot.
25:54 Sid's trauma of Woody coming alive in his hand was so satisfying to watch
And he's such trash that he made it his life.
@@STOCKHOLM07 Facts. Sid was absolute trash the whole movie. Being traumatized by his own toys that he abused was the ultimate punishment for him.
@@brandonford5459 It's not like he knew toys were capable of being "abused" in the first place.
It was necessary tbh
@Kenny-ep2nf IKR? Seeing Sid gets Punished by Woody and toys is my favorite part of the movie!!!!!😊😊😊😊😊
Fun fact around the time Toy Story 2 was ready they almost lost the entire film but someone had it on their backup laptop so they saved it
a pregnant employee, she was working from home because she was quite sick
"Eggman?? Why did they choose THAT as the name for the movers?"
Funny you should ask, Vicky. It's an Easter Egg (and yes, I did just come up with that pun on the spot as I'm typing this lol). The art director for the movie is named Ralph Eggleston. It's a nod to him.
Plus, they handle your belongings like eggs!
Then I guess they chose Eggman because Easter Bunny was already taken
I AM THE EGGMAN, THAT'S WHAT I AM
I AM THE EGGMAN, I GOT THE MASTER PLAN
@@TheHardStyleLifeUnironically an incredibly boss song. I think it gets meme’d (I could be mistaken; I don’t care about most memes, and I hate meme culture on the whole), but goddamn is it a great piece of music. That whole game is a friggin’ masterpiece. (Sonic Adventure 2 Battle, in case anyone reading doesn’t get the reference.) I really hope to see both Sonic Adventure games hit the Switch at some point, though I don’t know how they’ll manage to incorporate the separate Chao garden data so it still works the same.
May he rest in peace. He sent me those really cool art books from Pixar after I sent them a really nice letter. That was really cool!
Hey Vicki, the genius of Toy Story is that it the taps into so many aspect of being a child through the prism of playing with toys. --------- Andy and Mary play with toys like a normal kids, Sid is demonic with his toy play. ------- Each interaction takes you back to the child like zone when we just begged 5 more minutes.
The voice actors in this movie are legendary:
Woody- Tom Hanks
Buzz- Tim Allen
Mr. Potato Head- Don Rickles
Ham- John Ratzenberger
The Army Men- R. Lee Ermey
Andy’s Mom- Laurie Metcalf
There’s easily over 20 Oscars, Emmys, and Golden Globes nominations/winners between these six alone.
Edit: If you want a good laugh, watch some of Don Rickle’s roasts.
It's inconceivable that you didn't mention Wallace Shawn as Rex. Jim Varney as Slinky Dog also deserves some recognition. KnowwhatImean? :)
@@lurkerrekrul "Inconceivable!!"😁😁
As an old bastard it pleases me to know someone knows this
Annie Potts as Bo Peep as well.
In Foreest Gump when Forrest yells "I GOTTA FIND BUBBA!" he sounds just like Woody.😂
As a now middle aged man, I can still relate to being around Andy's age and thinking that my toys were alive in some way. I always treated them as if they were and I made sure to take very good care of them. Enough so that I still have the stuffed dog I was given a few days after I was born (I'm 53 now), along with his teddy bear pal and the little pillow that they both share. My doddy (pronounced dough-dee because I couldn't day doggy) will be with me until the day I die.
A fun fact, Joss Whedon who created Firefly helped write this, and John Lassiter one of the producers on this was paid homage in Firefly. His name Lassiter was the laser the crew of Serenity steals with YoSaffBridge
Hamm is played by John Ratsenburger, and he is in every Pixar movie ever made (at the very least, most of them). He's also Mack (Lightning's Truck from Cars), and he's one of the Waiters in Rattatouile, just to name a couple.
Another easter egg in every Pixar movie (and in movies by other studios as well) is A113. It's the classroom number for the most popular animation class at CalArts, so a lot of animation studios like to put it somewhere, most often a license plate like in Toy Story, Lilo and Stitch, and The Iron Giant.
He also plays Santa Claus in one of the Sabrina the Teenage Witch episodes.
@@StaticBlaster he was also in Empire Strikes Back. Dude has a formidable resume.
@@kawnir42 I didn't know that. Wow! I'll have to see that Star Wars movie again.
He was also Cliff Calvin from Cheers.
Too bad his politics lost him his job in Pixar movies.
The toy that Sid made with the fishing rod and legs is referred to as “hooker” lol 😂 I love it when they put jokes like that in kids movies
_Toy Story_ belongs in a very elite club I call "landmark films." They're landmarks because film making was one way before these movies came out and it was forever different after. Some landmark films include _The Jazz Singer_ (first movie with sound), _The Wizard of Oz_ (first widely distributed color film) and _Jurassic Park_ (first film with realistic CGI animals). _Toy Story_ was proof that a movie could be made from start to finish completely with computers. It's fascinating to watch Pixar's films in release order and see how the CGI gets better and better with each movie.
2:39 it is actually kind of funny how the nicest people are actually the best at acting like villains.
There’s even a saying about how the rage of a good person is far worse than the rage of a bad person.
There are 3 things all wise people fear. The sea in a storm. A night without a moon and the anger of a gentle man.
The most chilling thing is when someone so calmly and cooly expresses their anger without shouting…
There’s a speech at the start of an episode in the Matt smith era of DOCTOR WHO - “demons run when a good man goes to war…”
My whole life I never realized woody called buzz light beer 10:05
the Mrs Nizbit scene never fails to make me laugh😂
We stan Trans-Buzz
Marie Antoinette and her little sister!
Here in italy the Woody Voice was interpreted by Fabrizio Frizzi, a kind-hearted man, a gem of a soul, a famous Italian presenter here for 30 and more years. He' s sadly passed away for a Cancer not so long ago. He gave his voice to Woody in all the films, even in the music "You got a friend in me", and he was invested in those films, because he made happy so many kids and, I repeat, Frizzi Was one of the most kind man I ever seen. For me and for many many Italians here, grown With him and Toy Story, Every time we hear his voice, we tear up a bit.... Thanks to watch this Movie, V!
Ya know how everyone has that one movie they watched 1,000 times as a toddler? This was mine. I still know it by heart, they don’t make ‘em like this anymore!
Yeah, mine was Space Jam with Michael Jordan
Not only was this the most creative Pixar movie. It was perfectly put together. Every scene had a purpose. The lines and delivery weren’t forced. There was a lot of show and not tell moments. It was a nice blend of adult humor and kid’s humor that made watching it as a kid feel like a huge deal and not catering to just children. The world was so amazing in the perspective of a toy that is somehow lost in the times. They captured it almost as if it was told in the perspective of an actual kid who loves toys.
I like the fact that Sid didn't wake up from his tool box falling on the floor yet his alarm clock wakes him up. 🤣👍
It's similar to how people can sleep through super loud stuff and then the iPhone radar alarm sounds wakes them up. Happens to me all the time lol
Yup
Because he wanted to ride the pony lol
Fun Fact: Toy Story was the first full-length 3D / computer generated animation film to be made 🎉 It sure is odd looking, but it's also very impressive knowing it's the first.
Fun fact: the first Toy Story still relied on 3d scanned and digitized clay models for the animation.
The First 3D one that didnt used Clay models Is Cassiopéia i think
@@heitorkawano5124 Exactly, but it didn't had anywhere near the same release reach as Toy Story did. The fact it wasn't an American movie also played against it.
Pixar’s always been boss-basically the more recent equivalent of the OG Disney, Warner Bros., and Hannah-Barbara cartoons. (Before two of those companies became complete disgraces to their own legacies, that is. Yes, I am a *former* Disney and WB fan who now utterly loathes both companies. I still love their older properties, but no longer believe either company is worthy of said properties. I kinda wish Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Bugs Bunny, and Daffy Duck were real beings-just so I could be proven right about how they’d react to what their companies have become.)
Honestly, I think this movie still looks pretty damn good overall, aside from a few hiccups in some character movements due to technical limitations. (Eyelid movements, namely. It doesn’t bother me, but it does kinda stand out a bit.) The designs still look pretty clean, and even the appearance of the human characters looks more like a stylistic choice than anything else. Just goes to show that things made well-made by people who actually care about doing a good job-don’t really age much.
There was a 3D animation series sequel to transformers around the same era called BEAST WARS.
Being a tv series the budget was a little lower, some animations and environment textures and shapes are a bit wonky, but the character models are epic - well worth a nostalgic watch.
It was a genius move on Pixar's part to have their first ever feature film be about toys that don't have to look convincingly human, considering how primitive the 3D animation technology was at the time and how low-key horrifying the actual human characters ended up looking in this lol
Tim Allen, the voice of Buzz Lightyear, was at one of the heights of his professional career. He had a top rated show on television with Home Improvement, one of the greatest Christmas movies with The Santa Clause, and the first fully computer animated movie with Toy Story. He played Buzz with such dedication that one of his improvised lines is now iconic.
In my opinion, Woody was a jerk to Buzz because he never thought that he would be replaced as Andy's favorite toy. Being the favorite garnered Woody a form of seniority within Andy's room. When Woody saw all the other toys give Buzz all the adoration along with feeding Buzz's delusions, Woody couldn't take it any more. The toy adding gasoline to the fire was Mr Potato Head. Potato Head was one of the antagonists in this movie because he knew he wasn't the favorite and did everything in his power to up the contention. Seeing him get hit by RC in the moving van was his comeuppance.
If you believe the theory that Mr Potato Head was Andy’s original favourite before Woody, his fears are somewhat more justified because he knows favourite toys can be replaced since he was once on the other end of it.
Was the improvised line the one about "sucking down Darjeeling with Marie Antoinette and her little sister"?
For those that don’t know, in Home improvement, Tim Allen played a handyman that had his own TV show called Tool Time. The main sponsor of that fake show was Binford Tools. The tool box that traps woody in Sid’s room was a Binford toolbox. 23:29
Vicki to see your OCD at full display was hilarious. ------- A visit to Sid's bedroom would be like a horror movie scene to you. I couldn't stop laughing.
I promise you, that by the end of toy story 3, you will be balling like you have never balled in your entire life.
I'm not crying, you are.
I hate that I've seen Toy Story 4. It ruins everything about Toy Story 3's ending. Nothing left but greed and endless sequels.
Toy Story had a very troubled production. Woody was originally written to be a complete asshole to make the film more 'edgy', but the demo reel was a disaster and the film was almost cancelled. John Lasseter took charge and reworked Toy Story into its current state, saving the franchise.
The movie was originally due out in 1993, and had to spend almost two years either creating all new scenes, or reworking finished scenes to cut time by swapping characters out and just lip syncing the new dialog. Much of this movie is sort of a Frankenstein mess, but they pulled it off. Also, the big opening train sequence in Toy Story 3 is how they wanted to open this movie, showing Andy's imagination, but the animation was too primitive. So they took the more simpler route.
With each new Pixar release they upped their game with better visuals. A Bug's Life added depth of field and better textures then Toy Story 2 added even more eye-candy. Toy Story 3, IMO, just blows them all away in every way. It looks amazing and has a truly great story.
It's worth watching the PIXAR shorts as they really show the evolution of computer animation. You can see a bit of the genesis of Toy Story in "Tin Toy", and some like "Knick-Knack" are really entertaining in their own right. I believe that by the time they started to release feature length films, the shorts were testing new features in the rendering software. "For The Birds" was testing the ability to give their models realistic looking fur/feathers etc
Toy Story came out the month after I turned 8. I was living on Colorado with my mom. We had a next door neighbor who was a boy a few years older than me who took me to see it in the theater. I wish I could remember his name, but sadly the only thing I remember about him was I looked up to him because he could eat an entire grilled cheese sandwich in 3 bites! 🤯
Anyway, you're right about the new CGI animation being FREAKY VKunia. I hated it so much actually that I think we had to leave early. And the WHOLE WALK HOME I was crying, wanting my mom, and refusing to walk. So my poor kid neighbor had to drag me home, one big heave at a time as he held me by the hand.
I can only imagine how bad that looked to all the cars passing us as we walked home lol. I remember the sidewalk, the heaving, crying, and all the cars passing by super well. Almost 30 years later and I'm really sorry I put you through that as a child dude, wherever you are.
Boys break things cause we want to see how things are made/designed. We are builders. It is easier to put something together if one understands how an object/thing works.
Men and women are designed differently.
Hope this helps!
Yup, took apart the family VCR, remote controll, PC and so forth.
Which doesn't explain blowing things up with fireworks.
@@bhikku23 You picked that example. Who hurt you? I put bottle rockets in peoples mailboxes. Yet i turned out better than you did 30 years later.
I also never thought how the Davis family or the movers are curious why the door and ramp is open and gone. But funny seeing Potato Head gets his comeuppance at the mutiny. And brutalness on Woody. Sure, Woody was possessive of Andy, and didn't want to be replaced, but he changed.
My favorite part about this reaction is how terrified you are with the animation, watching it again as I’m older now I can honestly agree with you on that lmao 😂
I had that feeling with some earlier 3D animated movies, like Shrek or Monsters Inc. too, their animations are somewhat weird to watch nowadays :D It doesn't change the fact them being timeless classics though
What’s great about the other movies is that the 2nd was released 4 years later, 3rd was 11 years after two and 4 was 9 years after three! Time feels like it’s passed from 1-3 but feels like it hasn’t moved between 3 & 4. Also a heads up, the remaining movies have things in the credits.
I don't know when Pixar started it. But they do eventually have "outtakes" during the credits in the future. And they are one of the coolest parts of those movies.
They started doing it with their next film, A Bug's Life. They carried it on into Toy Story 2 and Monsters Inc, but they stopped doing it after that for some reason (maybe it was too expensive to keep doing it)
@christianwise637 That was pretty much the reason.
Little Fun Fact about Sid he is apparently based off of a former employee who has been known to disassemble toys and use the parts to build strange creations.
Rest in peace, Don Rickles, Jim Varney, and E. Lee Ermey (the voices of Mr. Potato Head, Slinky Dog, and Sarge, respectively). This movie was Pixar's first EVER major film they'd done. Make sure you have tissues ready for 2 and 3. Not kidding. Edit: Lightyear and Buzz Lightyear of Star Command are different things. The latter is now considered non-canon with the franchise, and that's why it'll never be on Disney+. Bullcrap on the whole it being not canon! The new Buzz Lightyear film shouldn't be canon! 2nd edit: The first doll that comes outta the sand was originally supposed to say "redrum" as a reference to The Shining, but they changed it. If you ain't seen The Shining, girl, come October, you gotta watch it! Slow film, but it really lets you get to know the main characters, and lemme tell you, Jack Nicholson is the best part of it. Just trust me on that. Final edit: 25:49 - The Exorcist reference. Another recommended film if you have yet to see that.
Holy balls, I had no idea the voice cast was so star packed
@@A_massive_wog Oh, yeah. Even Jodi Benson is in the franchise.
Yeah and Blake Clark, a close friend of Jim Varney's, took over the slinky dog role for Toy Story 3 which went into production after Varney's death. Toy Story 4 I believe came out after Don Rickles died and they just used alternate takes from the first three to finish his role in that film. R Lee Ermey was the shit.
@@justarandomveryintelligent8934 Nah, it was just stock audio for Mr. Potato Head in Toy Story 4. His role wasn't really that big there. Barry Bostwick was rumored to be taking over, but it was just decided to use archived recordings of Don Rickles from the first film. Key & Peele, on the other hand, now those two were hilarious in that one! "Plush rush!"
"Lightyear and Buzz Lightyear of Star Command are different things. The latter is now considered non-canon with the franchise, and that's why it'll never be on Disney+. Bullcrap on the whole it being not canon! The new Buzz Lightyear film shouldn't be canon!" And sadly, because the staff at Pixar and Disney are just offended by the Buzz Lightyear cartoon that they refused to associate themselves with it and just decided to replace it with that awful origin Lightyear movie that no one asked for. I still miss the cartoon show. 😥
At this point in history, Pixar was its own company and would not be acquired by Disney until 2006. Steve Jobs was head of Pixar, as this was after his first stint at Apple, and before his comeback to Apple. Apple in the mid 90s was dying, until Jobs went back to Apple and revived it in the 2000s.
This was a ground breaking movie that put Steve Jobs (who had left Apple to found Pixar) back on top. It introduced the world to CGI graphics and changed animated films forever.
And it happens to be a classic series.
Also the first big break of a young writer named Joss Whedon
Steve Jobs didn't found Pixar. It started as Lucasfilm's computer division but got spun off into its own company just a year after he left Apple and founded NeXT (which would later get bought by Apple and result in him becoming its CEO for the rest of his life; the NeXTSTEP operating system also ended up becoming the framework for Mac OS X/"macOS" and, in turn, all of macOS's derivative OSes like iOS and watchOS). Jobs provided significant financial backing for the fledgling Pixar, so he quickly became the majority shareholder, which earned him quite a bit of Disney stock when the Mouse bought Pixar (enough that Jobs instantly became Disney's largest shareholder until his death).
Thank you for making me feel old. I was 6 when Toy Story 1 was released. Even if I don't remember watching 1 in the cinemas I do remember watching Toy Story 2 in the cinema and it was so fun! :D
Toy Story's a fun movie. In some ways, I guess it's an extended tech demo as it was the first feature-length CGI movie. I always enjoyed Toy Story 2 more than this one. This is still a lot of fun though!
Fun fact: Pixar as an animation studio was founded in 1979 as a division of Lucasfilm, yes the very Lucasfilm that made Star Wars, and when it was able to be spun off into its own CGI company in 1986 it was able to do so with funding from Steve Jobs, who became a majority shareholder. Pixar wasn't officially part of Disney until 2006, its just that when they finally made this first entry in a feature length animated film, Disney was just their producer on this and two other films after that, though they have worked with Disney before on some sequences of some hand-drawn Disney films like The Rescuers Down Under. Interestingly, the few films after Toy Story were made, there were disagreements between Pixar and Disney.
So interesting fact: They didn't start making toys about this movie until near to the release date, and didn't have enough to meet demand. They even make a small joke about this in the sequel.
When buzz truly flies and woody says buzzes phrase I just get the biggest smile like when I was a kid
How have you seen so many Pixar movies yet NOT Toy Story!?! I'm so glad you are getting to it now!
because people lie. do you really think there are all of these reaction channels that have never seen all of the most popular movies of the last 40 years
She is either a liar or has been living in a cave up until she started a youtube channel. People are just too stupid to see past it or are just simping for him
@@bauman921 Plenty of people don't watch many movies. Prior to maybe 2015, out of these most popular movies of the last 40 years, I had probably seen maybe 10... 3 of which were the LoTR movies. I've probably seen more in the past decade than in the previous 25 years.
@@bauman921 Have you seen every popular made before you were born?
@@Beardo2517Yes
Each film grows in technique. For instance, Finding Nemo improves their water dynamics. You literally watch Pixar get better with CGI in each film. Plus Each film has an easter egg of the next film hidden somewhere in the background. Should watch A Bug's Life before watching Toy Story 2 and so on.
-Sage
You expect me to believe that you never saw toy story? C'mon
You're not real man
Yeah it's like come on, now she has never seen a movie before
She's Gen Z. It's actually believable because they grew up on Finding Nemo and Wall-E.
I'm sayinnnnnn
@@AthasinI was born during 2006 and grew up watching Toy Story (Wall-E and Finding Nemo too)
Yeahhhh, if you're getting into the full quadrilogy, be ready for tears 😂 Toy Story 2 & 3 both have genuine claims to be the greatest sequels ever made - and 4, whilst I personally don't hold it on the same level, is still probably just as good as this original film if you ask me :)
"I never understood a little boy's fascination with destruction, and breaking things. Like, what is satisfying about that?"
When you're young, you lack the emotional intelligence to express your feelings and vent your frustrations in a healthy and articulate way. Also, you might just have an excess of energy to expel. These days, there exists places one can go to pay to destroy a room full of destructible items. You can take a sledgehammer to a wall, a bat to some expensive vases and the like. It can be quite therapeutic and stress relieving.
nah it's more about finding out how things work
I'll also add that the power and control you can feel from destruction has its appeal as a kid when you really have none in your life.
@@emperorwiseman Also no, It's about curiosity and figuring out how things are made. IDK what kind of book you read but for me it wasn't about power or control as a kid. Or lack of some emotional intelligence. You're all crazy.
@@robertc49 I'm sure that was true for you and many others. But there are billions of people with infinite different life situations that serve as motivation for behavior. It's a little weird how you can't comprehend any experience other than your own. What I said wasn't even true for me. I just observed it in others.There isn't just one answer to the question.
I had to rip things apart growing up: an old outhouse, old roof, grandma Reed's house. My career in testing involved a lot of breaking things from throwing equipment off roofs, driving cars over them, etc. Such fun!
after all the years since the movie came out, and the thousands of times i've watched it with my cousin as kids, i still get goosebumps and giddy when Woody says "to infinity and beyond!" .
This isn't flying, this is falling with styles😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
Toy story 2 carries the quality and spirit of the first movie (but even better IMO) and 3 ends the story in the most perfect way imagineable.
To me, those first three films are the only ones worth watching, even though additional ones were made.
How have you never seen Toy Story!?!?!?!?
Growing up, this was THE movie for me. The VHS came out a month after I was born and I was obsessed. I had tons of Buzz Lightyear toys, even dressed up as Buzz in kindergarten. One of those movies that just gets better with time, despite their technical limitations. I don’t know if I’ll get to have kids one day, but I know if I do, I’m showing them this movie.
There is absolutely no way you haven't seen this. You had this on tape, you played it over and over just like the rest of us.
agreed
if someone says they haven't seen toy story i need an explanation
were you in a coma?
abducted by aliens?
She is so fake. I get that people aren't going to see every movie out there but there are way too many movies that she acts like she hasn't seen. I noticed that she will talk a lot in certain reactions which is her tell
@@ScrimshonScandynot saying I disagree but I don’t think that’s really a tell I think she just talks more in some that require it
I know a ton of people that have never seen Toy Story. It’s not that weird
i was saying the same thing lol she should just put "First Time Watching..in a while"🤣
A lot of people have pointed out the messiness behind this movie's production, and how it was almost cancelled. When it came to the HD release, that was a huge undertaking. The movie was originally rendered in 1536 × 922 pixels, and then blown up to be shown on 35mm film (~4K), which softened the movie up a lot, hiding a lot of the imperfections. When it came time to make the HD master of Toy Story, much of the software was obsolete and many of the files broken. They basically had to completely reverse engineer the movie using Toy Story 3's animation software, working with people from the original "RenderMan" software team to create a lot of custom plug-ins that could read and animate the original movie's files. In doing this, they also went back and fixed some of the minor lighting issues, color correction, blurry textures, and spots where the animations would clip through things in the original. They essentially had to remake the movie. Same with Toy Story 2.
I hopefully you're gonna watch the whole Toy Story movies, That will be amazing!!!!
This was the first feature-length 3D animation movie, VK.
This series is bitter-sweet. The sequels were made to grow older with the billions of fans it had since the first.
It really is funny, yet heart-breaking at times and oh so nostalgic!
fun fact when the animators came up with the engine used in this movie they couldnt make a person with it because it "felt like they were made of plastic" then they had an ideia of making a movie about plastic toys
Toy Story was something that personally defined my chilhood. The movie was already 2 years old by the time I was born, but growing up in a G-rated household and a sister 4 years older, there was much to watch other than Disney movies and shows. But I'm glad that was the case. "This isn't flying. This is falling, with style" "TO INFINITY AND BEYOND" That scene always brings a bit of a tear to my eye, even at 27 years old and having seen the movie thousands of times by now. Also, if you pay attention to certain parts of the movie, you can notice other references to other movies, such as Buzz and the ultimate weapon Zurg has with only one weakness lol read between the lines with that one lmfao
Toy Story has the best voice cast and characters ever
thank you for watching it and have a great week Vicky.
🕊️📺🕊️
I hope you do the sequels - the 2nd movie has bloopers and 3rd & 4th movie actually has a couple of mini movies, plus they're very emotional so you might wanna have some tissues 😉🙂
As you get older you realize that Sid wasn’t evil he was just taking the toys apart and putting them back together in weird and creative ways
Buuuut he was also murdering them outright. He blew up a soldier toy with a firecracker and was planning to obliterate Buzz the same way.
@@Epistolary8 no different with RUclips videos about crushing objects with a hydraulic press.
He was a jerk to his sister and made her life awful.
He's a bad person.
@@AA-cf4esHe gets better, though. And yeah he's kind of a jerk in some other ways, but as far as he knows, his "torture and murder" is just messing around with inanimate objects.
If you don't know that the objects are alive, all he did was some light property damage
The movie garnered three Academy Award nominations: Best Original Screenplay (making it the first animated feature to achieve this), Best Original Song for "You've Got a Friend in Me," and Best Original Score. It also received a non-competitive Special Achievement Academy Award. In 2005, Toy Story was chosen by the Library of Congress for inclusion in the United States National Film Registry due to its "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" status, making it one of the first nine films to receive this honor in its inaugural year of eligibility.
Yay Finally Thanks you my Favorite movie Disney Pixars
This film defined my childhood and is my favorite despite the dated animation and technology. Woody and Buzz’s journey from adversaries to unlikely friends is such a fun story and one of the best. It’s amazing what you can do with what you have, just like playing with toys.
Fun fact this was Pixar's first attempt at animating 3D humans hence why they look like they do
I have fond memories of seeing this in the theaters. I brought the VHS release into 3rd grade in 1995 to ask my teacher if we could watch it in class. It was a big deal at the time, and no one could believe that I already had it on VHS. We watched it that week in school 😎
My parents were the best. I was responsible for many movie viewings at my elementary school.
If you look closely at Andy’s Friends, they are all clones of him. It’s either a creepy Easter egg by Disney or to save time with animation.
I worked at a group for sixteen years and one of the residents who has autism watched this movie on loop. So I've seen this movie more than any other movie and I still love it. I still watch it on my own from time to time and remember the happiness this film brought to A.
Run like the wind BullsCry
Small Soldiers (1998) is the action movie version of this concept and its awesome. I highly recommended.
If you're part of Gen Z or a Millennial, you know you were always in for a treat when it came to kids movies
Absolutely
I'm millennial. Born in 1992.
@@brandonford5459 once you hit 97' you're GenZ. Most people don't realize this
@angeloalvarez5520 Yeah. Millennial is when you're born between 1981 to 1996.
Grew up watching this as early as 3 years old. I watched this over and over and never found anything creepy except for Sid's room. I was obsessed with this movie.
One interesting Easter egg is that the tool box in Sid's room is from Binford. Those are the kind of tools Tim Allen's character uses and endorses on "Tool Time", the show he hosted on the 90s sitcom "Home Improvement".
I wonder what a horror movie or video game of Toy Story would be like. Maybe it could be like FNAF but it takes place in Andy’s house.
fun fact: the scene in sids room when the tool box falls off the table you can see Binford written on the side of the tool box. Binford was the Tim Allens tool company on the show Home Improvement
I think the most unrealistic thing about this movie is how strong that claw machine was… Like really
My favorite part is Sid is screaming like a girl when terrified of his own toys 😂
Oh man this takes me back when I was 5 years old and got Toy Story on VHS for Christmas (yes, VHS...). Man I feel old. Everybody back then was so amazed by the fact they did an entire movie in a computer xD
From some articles, the moving house was because the parents were having a divorce.
You will love the second movie!
Fun Fact: Joss Whedon (director of Marvel’s The Avengers & creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer), worked on the script, and is the one who came up with the idea to have Buzz not realize he’s a toy, plus created the character Rex… so crazy to think how instrumental he was for two beloved series
Easter Egg: At the time this was made, Tom Hanks was one of the biggest movie stars and Tim Allen was one of the biggest TV stars. Allen was starring in Home Improvement in which he has a cable show called Tool Time, sponsored by Binford Tools. In the scene where Buzz and Woody are in Sid's bedroom and Buzz is pushing the toolbox to free Woody, the name on the toolbox is Binford Tools, a nod to Tim Allen's fictional TV show from Home Improvement.
"I never understood a little boy's fascination with destruction and breaking things. I mean what is satisfying about that?"
It's not necessarily just breaking things, but also putting them back together. It's also about finding out and understanding the 'pieces' of a thing. Also sometimes it's just fun to watch something break and collapse, or get blown up. We've all got a bit of Michael Bay in us, I guess. Not sure how to explain it, but yes, destruction is entertaining. Ideally building something should be more entertaining, though.
This movie is so important to me... My dad is like the macho man stereotiype. The guy who wont take shi* from anyone and the whole serious dude. But when i was a kid he knew how much i liked this movie so he used to say to me all the time "to the infinity and beyond" which to me always shows how much he loved me, to quote from a cartoon just to make me happy... So thats a really good memory that i have that was created because of this movie.
In Toy Story 1. Both Hanks and Allen signed up for emotional reasons. They had an emotional reason for assuming the character of Woody too. Hollywood's nicest guy had often wondered whether his toys came alive when he left the room as a child and so felt compelled to help capture kids' imaginations in the same way.
This movie is how I got rid all my toys because I watched it when I too young to not understand. =D
Tom Hanks and Tim Allen were quite the dynamic duo in this movie franchise, no one can beat their voice acting. Plus they both have the best lines throughout the movie
Yes, Pixar unleashed their creativity . . . this was their first movie!!!
"I'm Woody! Howdy howdy howdy" That scene with the shark is always funny.
Having R. Lee Ermey -- Gunny -- as Sarge was a brilliant casting decision.
16:22 -- this line has a WHOLE new meaning, when you see Toy Story 3.
If you have the chance to go to a Disney park, you need to check out Toy Story Midway Mania. It's a lot of fun.
cute movie, althoug when Sid toys came out of their hiding places and show themselves to Woddy and Buzz, and the "living toys" at the end was friggin scary as a child!! i got goosbumps all over again when Woddy turns 360 his head sayin "We toys can se EEEEEEEEVRYTHIIIIING"
During 4th of July I destroyed so many toys with fireworks. If only I had known eBay was going to be a thing later in life. Those toys probably would have been worth a lot of money. 😭
23:29 I never noticed it before but Buzz is moving a toolbox that's labeled "Binford Tools". That's the company that Tim Allen's character worked for in the TV show Home Improvement LOL