Starring Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Joan Cusack, Ned Beatty, Don Rickles, Michael Keaton, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Blake Clark, Estelle Harris, Jodi Benson, John Morris, Emily Hahn, Laurie Metcalf, R. Lee Ermey, Jeff Pidgeon, Teddy Newton, Bud Luckey, Javier Fernandez-Peña, Timothy Dalton
Directed by Lee Unkrich
Expectations: High. I can’t wait!
Toy Story 3 is an excellent conclusion to the Toy Story series, effectively giving fans another shot of toy action that manages to exceed the previous sequel and almost reach the heights of the near-perfect first film. I had the utmost faith in the team at Pixar to deliver a quality film, but they even exceeded my expectations.
There are thrills and laughs a-plenty in Toy Story 3. It is easily the most consistently funny entry in the series and the action is as exciting as anything in comparable live-action films. Graphically, the film is also the pinnacle of the series as you might expect, coming so far after the previous two films. The better fidelity of backgrounds, textures and lighting never draw attention to themselves though, and the film retains a very similar visual style to the first two films, so it never feels like you can’t go back and watch the older entries. Kudos to the guys in 1995 for achieving something that timeless with the first Toy Story!
I have to wonder if the eleven year gap between sequels was something of a calculated timeframe or if they just got busy making other things and kept putting Toy Story 3 off. I suppose it’s possible they were prodded into making it from Disney execs (giving the branding iron that adds the “3” to the title screen new meaning), but somehow I think that they always intended to go back and finish Andy’s story. While the toys are the definite focal point of the series for the audience, Andy is the toy’s focal point and he is integral to the success of the pictures. He is the driving force of the films, the goal is always to be back in Andy’s arms, providing whatever he needs to him.
[I’m going to spoil the ending after this point. You’ve been warned.]
Andy sees Bonnie playing imaginatively with her own toys as he once did and he smiles, knowing that he is doing the right thing. He gets down on the ground next to her and one by one hands her the toys, introducing them with a brief moment of play. It’s so gratifying to finally see these toys get what they desire, one final instance of Andy Play before being passed on to a new owner. Andy never falters until he comes to Woody. He wonders how he got there and would have taken him back to his car with him, but Bonnie exclaims with excitement upon seeing “her cowboy.” Andy doesn’t want to part, but he must become an adult, he must take the first step to manhood. Toys are for children and you cannot hold onto youth by keeping your toys in a box in the dark closets of your lifetime. He makes Bonnie happy and gives up Woody in the ultimate tear-jerk moment of the film. It’s such a strong, simple statement on growing up and it works beautifully.
Toy Story 3 achieves the greatness rarely found in a single film, let alone a part three. It’s not only one of the best animated films Pixar has ever made, it’s one of the best films of the year. The early section of the film is a bit derivative with all the prison elements, but nearly everything else is an imaginative home run. Adults and children alike will laugh, cry and leave completely satisfied from Toy Story 3.