Mercifully, viewers were spared a tragic culmination to the beloved franchise and saw a full-circle ending instead. With seemingly no way out, the toy family reconcile their sad fate, make amends and join hands before death - a heavy notion for the PG-rated age group, which surely prompted thousands of conversations between parents and their kids about what happens to our loved ones after finding themselves in a furnace. The toys of “Toy Story,” including Woody (Tom Hanks), Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) and a rotating cast of dilapidated dolls, had managed to survive being lost inside a Pizza Planet restaurant (“Toy Story”), and getting pilfered by a maniacal, mouth-breathing toy collector who brought them to Japan (“Toy Story 2”).īut “Toy Story 3” presented the most traumatic circumstances of all: being sent to a daycare center where a malevolent purple bear would shove them into a dump truck that drops them off in an incinerator. One decade after the dramatic climax of “Toy Story 3” - wherein the gang find themselves trapped in a garbage incinerator and facing certain annihilation - the film’s director Lee Unkrich has come to confirm just how dark that scene really was. It’s one of the realest moments in animated movie history. ‘Toy Story’ director spoils debate over whether toys can die Tim Allen gives honest take about possible retirement plans Iconic San Francisco toy store that inspired ‘Toy Story’ films closing after 86 years over ‘perils and violence’ in city’s downtown
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