Monday, October 8, 2007

A very bad movie! - Toy Story Reviews

This film is all a boy called Andy who has toys which come to life when he is not around. Andy does NOT know that his toys come to life. The film talks about how the toys hate the idea of Andy buying new toys. This because they think that Andy will get rid of them because he likes the new toys better. The toys in this film were behaving like real people. As a matter of fact, they were like a different sort of people because they felt that they could do anything. What was really puzzling about this film was that Woody told Buzz that he a toy. Woody constantly said, "YOU ARE A TOY! You are not a real person!" This does not make sense because Woody obviously knew that he was a toy himself. Woody was probably trying to talk down to Buzz. I think that this film is very bad. But it's not one of my worst films. I think it might have been a bit better in a few places but on the whole it was a bad film.

Ahead of it's time - Toy Story Reviews

Why doesn't Pixar just release a new movie every couple of month? This movie is amazing. The computer graphics alone steal the show, but the scipt is also very tightly written. Very funny for a PG movie as these writers know how to make you laugh without being vulgar.

Definately better than the 2nd! - Toy Story Reviews

i didnt really like the second movie too much but this movie is really great! i love this movie! watch this! its worth seeing 6 times! (thats how many times ive seen it =P)

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Story - Toy Story Reviews

hi my name is gurshan how are you are you ok if you are ok then why did you invite me to dinner you are a bad bay and trouble

The most entertaining animated movie ever - Toy Story Reviews

"Toy Story" may not be the greatest animated achievement ever; that either goes to "Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs" or "Fantasia." What it is, however, is more entertaining than both those films combined; in fact, it is among the most entertaining films ever made. The story is one that never fails to touch our hearts: a child loses a treasured toy. We've all seen this before from no less than the genius minds of Jim Henson and Frank Oz (not to mention Fred Rogers, those creative geniuses over at Cartoon Network, and that Ksupo company that does Nickelodeon's "Rugrats"); yet never has a movie so brilliantly encapsulated what it's like to be a ten-year-old boy. So many issues are touched-on in "Toy Story" as well. For the kids, it can help them deal with jealousy, friendship, compassion, and depression; for the adults, there's enough wit and wisdom to go around, but such hot-button issues as workplace competition are surprisingly resonant here. Obviously, "Toy Story" is important for its contribution to the now-gazillion-dollar industry that is computer-animated movies. But what it has that no other computer-animated movie has yet (besides the glorious "Monsters, Inc.") is a winning heart. Woody, magificently voiced by Tom Hanks, and Buzz Lightyear, who boasts the voice of a surprisingly brilliant Tim Allen, encapsulate every diametric opposition imaginable: Woody is old-school, while Buzz represents the new, improved mechanical toys; Woody is the established "king" of young Andy's toybox, while Buzz is the young upstart toy; Woody has accepted and is happy with his status as a toy, while Buzz is under the seeming delusion that he's some sort of "space ranger." Hanks and Allen give life to the best on-screen buddy-duo in history, a veritable odd couple right out of a Neil Simon play--except that Woody hates Buzz with every ounce of his being. There are jokes in this movie too numerous to count, but Woody has most of the best one-liners, including the oft-missed "Okay, Mr. LightBeer, prove it." Hanks has always been at his best when using his vocal talents more than his acting ability (I maintain that he's more impressive in "Big" and "Forrest Gump" than in "Saving Private Ryan" or "Philadelphia"), and his reactions to the situations inside toy-land are irrepresively funny (witness Woody's reaction to a hive of identical squeezy-toy aliens in a claw machine who essentially worship the claw like a golden calf). There were numerous talented writers on this film (including "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" creator Joss Whedon, "Simpsons" writer Joel Cohen, John "Finding Nemo" Lasseter, and "Monsters, Inc." director Peter Docter to name a few), and while the styles are decidedly distinct, it never feels like any one style prevails over any of the others. Without a doubt, some jokes seem wholly Simpsonian (see that claw machine gag), while much of the dialogue could have come right out of a "Buffy" episode, but the different styles mesh so well that eventually you forget you're watching an animated kids' movie and just enjoy the ride. Everything about "Toy Story" is perfect; only the overly trite ending shot of Buzz and Woody grinning ironically at each other keeps this film from being the greatest of all time.

First pixar movie - Toy Story Reviews

It's a movie about a world where toys come to life. My favorite part was when Sid took Woody and Buzz to his house, but the saddest part was Andy lost his favorite toys. ANYWAY, THIS MOVIE IS AWESOME. I bought the video in 1996.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

This movie was awesome!!! - Toy Story Reviews

This movie was so funnie! I loved Woodie and Buzz and all the other characters! Our family watched this movie over and over!!