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Synopsis

A little boy named Andy loves to be in his room, playing with his toys, especially his doll named “Woody”. But, what do the toys do when Andy is not with them, they come to life. Woody believes that he has life (as a toy) good. However, he must worry about Andy’s family moving, and what Woody does not know is about Andy’s birthday party. Woody does not realize that Andy’s mother gave him an action figure known as Buzz Lightyear, who does not believe that he is a toy, and quickly becomes Andy’s new favorite toy. Woody, who is now consumed with jealousy, tries to get rid of Buzz. Then, both Woody and Buzz are now lost. They must find a way to get back to Andy before he moves without them, but they will have to pass through a ruthless toy killer, Sid Phillips. —IMDb

Director

Original

John Lasseter

A pioneer of modern animation, notably the computer-generated animation that dominated the mid- to late ‘90s, John Lasseter started out doing traditional hand-drawn work. His passion for animation began in high school and, after writing an exuberant letter to Disney Studios, he started studying art and drawing on his own. Shortly after graduation, Lasseter became the second student to be accepted into Disney’s new animation program at the California Institute of the Arts. In the summers, he worked as an apprentice at the Disney Studios. While in school, he created two short films, Lady and the Lamp and Nitemare, both of which won Student Academy Awards. Shortly after graduation, Lasseter was hired by the Disney feature animation department and he spent the next five years there, working on such features as The Fox and the Hound (1981) and the short Mickey’s Christmas Carol (1983).

In 1982, Lasseter received his first exposure to computer animation… read more

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Adam Piercy

17Mar12

Not just one of the greatest animation films, but one of the greatest of all films.

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Con-Bot 2.0

9Mar12

An obvious classic of animation and storytelling with memorable characters, intelligent humour and (at the time) ground-breaking visuals. I saw it millions of times as a kid, it's never gotten old and even on multiple future viewings, it never will.

Steve Pulaski and JEDIDARRICK like this

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astri chairina

28Jan12

This is one of things that i could never get out my head...I still believe that my toys are really could talk..~~

WhatsUpWill

10Dec11

Having just revisited this, I found that it's just as good if not better than the sequel. It's definitely among Pixar's best.

Con-Bot 2.0 likes this

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Reviews

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Vers l'infini et au-delà? Pas cette fois, mais de peu!

By Benoît on August 11, 2011

Ca faisait un sacré bail que je n’avais plus vu Toy Story (je pense que ça remonte à dix ans).
Côté technique, avouons-le, après plus de quinze ans ça commence à vieillir. La faute à Pixar et aux…  read review

Ages three and up! It’s on my box! … Toy Story

By jaredmo​barak on May 31, 2010

It’s hard to believe that, with Toy Story 3 coming out soon, it has been fifteen years since the original film. Back in 1995, Toy Story ushered in an animation renaissance for not only Disney, but…  read review

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