Toy Story 2

Bada0Bing

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Amazon.com video review: John Lasseter and his gang of high-tech creators at Pixar create another entertainment for the ages. Like the few great movie sequels, Toy Story 2 comments on why the first one was so wonderful while finding a fresh angle worthy of a new film. The craze of toy collecting becomes the focus here, as we find out Woody (voiced by Tom Hanks) is not only a beloved toy to Andy but also a rare doll from a popular '60s children's show. When a greedy collector takes Woody, Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) launches a rescue mission with Andy's other toys. To say more would be a crime because this is one of the most creative and smile-inducing films since, well, the first Toy Story.

Although the toys look the same as in the 1994 feature, Pixar shows how much technology has advanced: the human characters look more human, backgrounds are superior, and two action sequences that book-end the film are dazzling. And it's a hoot for kids and adults. The film is packed with spoofs, easily accessible in-jokes, and inspired voice casting (with newcomer Joan Cusack especially a delight as Cowgirl Jessie). But as the Pixar canon of films illustrates, the filmmakers are storytellers first. Woody's heart-tugging predicament can easily be translated into the eternal debate of living a good life versus living forever. Toy Story 2 also achieved something in the U.S. two other outstanding 1999 animated features (The Iron Giant, Princess Mononoke) could not: it became a huge box-office hit. --Doug Thomas


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I finally sat down and watched this entire movie. My kids used to watch it all the time when they were little, so I had seen bits and pieces of it. Very likable movie from start to finish. I loved the 2nd Buzz story line, that was hilarious.

The settings on Zurg's gun are numbered to eleven, a reference to Nigel Tufnel's amplifier in This Is Spinal Tap (1984).

Funny, I didn't pick up on that.

Originally intended as a direct-to-video release, but the early test scenes played so well that Pixar started over and redeveloped it into a theatrical release movie.

And then it goes on to gross almost $250 million, nice.
 

dreamcastrocks

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Love the Toy Story movies. Favorite Pixar movies by far.
 

Linderbee

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Love the Toy Story movies. Favorite Pixar movies by far.
That's because your kids weren't born when they first came out, and you didn't have to go around the grocery store with your kids in the shopping cart yelling that they want to "play with their Woody", "Hey, mom, look what my Woody can do", "Anyone want to pull my Woody" (He had a drawstring that made him talk), etc., etc., etc. The levels of embarrassment were never-ending.


Ah, the good ol' days...
 
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