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Movies Toy Story 1, 2 & 3 (3D), Toy Story short film - June 24th 2011

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TSCalvin871989
post Jul 9 2008, 04:10 AM, updated 16y ago

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Toy Story 3

Official Website: http://disney.go.com/toystory/
IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0435761/
Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toy_Story_3

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Toy Story 3 is an upcoming American computer-animated 3-D film being produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It is the third installment in the Toy Story series and is scheduled for release on June 18, 2010, in the United States. Lee Unkrich, who edited the previous films and co-directed the second, takes over as director. Tom Hanks and Tim Allen have been confirmed to return to voice the characters of Woody and Buzz respectively.

Plot

Andy is departing for college, and his toys, including Woody (Tom Hanks) and Buzz (Tim Allen), are going to be put in the attic. Before they can be put in the attic, they are accidentally thrown away and are picked up by the garbage men. The toys find themselves at a local day-care center, where they must try to survive the playful but careless pre-school children. Woody attempts to save his friends and find themselves a new home, but matters are further complicated when Buzz is damaged during an escape attempt. The toys try to reset Buzz, but end up causing him to revert to a Spanish version of his delusions of being a space ranger, much to the other toys' discomfort.

Cast

Tom Hanks as Woody
Tim Allen as Buzz Lightyear
Joan Cusack as Jessie
John Ratzenberger as Hamm
Wallace Shawn as Rex
Don Rickles as Mr. Potato Head
Estelle Harris as Mrs. Potato Head
Jodi Benson as Barbie
Michael Keaton as Ken
Blake Clark as Slinky Dog
John Morris as Andy Davis
Laurie Metcalf as Mrs. Davis
Timothy Dalton as Mr. Pricklepants
Ned Beatty
Jeff Garlin
Bonnie Hunt
Whoopi Goldberg
Kristen Schaal


Lee Unkrich has confirmed on his Twitter account that Bo Peep, RC, Lenny, and Wheezy will appear in Toy Story 3. He also confirmed that there will be an animated short attached to the film

Development

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According to the terms of Pixar's revised deal with Disney, all characters created by Pixar for their films were owned by Disney. Furthermore, Disney retained the rights to make sequels to any Pixar film, though Pixar retained the right of first refusal to work on these sequels. But in 2004, when the contentious negotiations between the two companies made a split appear likely, Disney Chairman at the time Michael Eisner put in motion plans to produce Toy Story 3 at a new Disney studio, Circle 7 Animation. Tim Allen, the voice of Buzz Lightyear, indicated a willingness to return even if Pixar was not on board

Jim Herzfeld wrote a script for Circle 7's version of the film. It focused on the other toys shipping a malfunctioning Buzz to Taiwan, believing that he will be fixed there. While searching on the Internet, however, they find out that the malfunctions are happening to many toys around the world and the company has issued a massive recall. Fearing Buzz's destruction, a group of Andy's toys (Woody, Rex, Slinky, Mr. Potato Head, Hamm, Jessie, and Bullseye) venture to rescue Buzz. At the same time Buzz meets other toys from around the world that were once loved but have now been recalled.

In January 2006, Disney bought Pixar in a deal that put Pixar chiefs Edwin Catmull and John Lasseter in charge of all Disney Animation. Shortly thereafter, Circle 7 Animation was shut down and its version of Toy Story 3 was shelved. The following month, Disney CEO Robert Iger confirmed that Disney was in the process of transferring the production to Pixar. John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton, Pete Docter, and Lee Unkrich visited the house where they first pitched Toy Story and came up with the story for the film over a weekend. Stanton then wrote a treatment. On February 8, 2007, Catmull announced Toy Story 2's co-director, Lee Unkrich, as the sole director of the film instead of John Lasseter, and Michael Arndt as screenwriter. The release date was moved to 2010.

Instead of sending Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, and John Ratzenberger scripts for their consideration in reprising their roles, a complete story reel of the film was shown to the actors in a theater. The reel was made up of moving storyboards with pre-recorded voices, sound effects, and music. At the conclusion of the preview, the actors signed on to the film

Marketing

The film's first teaser trailer was released with the Disney Digital 3-D version of the film Up on May 29, 2009. On October 2, 2009 Toy Story and Toy Story 2 were re-released as a double feature in Disney Digital 3-D. The first full-length trailer was attached as an exclusive sneak peek to the Toy Story double feature, on October 12, 2009.

Mattel and Lego are among those who will make toys to promote the film. Disney Interactive Studios will also produce a video game based on the film

Trailer



This post has been edited by Calvin871989: Jun 18 2010, 11:57 PM
TSCalvin871989
post Sep 11 2008, 01:37 AM

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thread updated smile.gif
TSCalvin871989
post Jan 1 2010, 11:20 PM

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http://www.slashfilm.com/2010/01/01/mr-pri...ini-featurette/

QUOTE
Mr. Pricklepants Revealed in New Toy Story 3 Mini-Featurette

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While there’s very little new material in the new Toy Story 3 featurette Drawn to Animation, what little there is has premium fan value. Finally, we’re given our first look at Mr. Pricklepants, the pretentious thespian stuffed-toy Hedgehog who seems set to be one of the major additions to the cast. Of course, we still have no idea at all what role he actually plays in the story. Maybe he’s fundamental, maybe he’s not but you can pretty much guarantee he won’t just be an irrelevant adjunct. Those kind of narrative loose ends just don’t exist in Pixar pictures.

See the full clip for yourself after this break and get to hear Pricklepants speak. He’s been voiced by Timothy Dalton, who has probably the most geek-centric resume of any Bond - Dr. Who, Hot Fuzz, some Ghibli dubbing, Looney Tunes, even the Flash Gordon movie…

According to Upcoming Pixar, this clip premiered on the Disney Channel. They also observed that Pricklepants looks somewhat like Winnie the Pooh, and I can definitely see that



Good stuff, huh? And a fun take on what 3D is going to offer us.

When Disney held a pick press event back in the autumn and then later at the D23 event, they showed this footage of Pricklepants alongside the first full length Toy Story 3 trailer. I think we mere mortals who were not in the room are now up to date on all of the Pixar footage that has been showcased.

Toy Story 3 director Lee Unkrich yesterday tweeted:

Enjoying the last day I can say “Toy Story 3 doesn’t come out ’til next year.”

And today, we can all enjoy the fact that it’s out this year. Finally. To say there’s a lot of expectations suspended over this one would be putting it mildly. There was a while when Pixar and Disney were going their separate ways, when the Circle 7 team were put in charge of making a third Toy Story, that the future of the franchise looked rather bleak… thankfully, that now all feels like a fading bad dream.





TSCalvin871989
post Feb 11 2010, 10:06 AM

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Disney will finally release a new trailer for Lee Unkrich’s Toy Story 3 tomorrow, but if you can’t wait, a 30-second preview has shown up online. nod.gif


TSCalvin871989
post Feb 12 2010, 12:56 AM

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as promised, here's the 2nd trailer. enjoy! smile.gif


TSCalvin871989
post Jun 18 2010, 12:12 AM

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oh boy, oh boy, oh boy! rclxm9.gif

if default gave it a 9.5/10 rating, ill give it a 10/10 rating ! thumbup.gif

yeah, "you got a friend in me". it never gets old huh ? smile.gif

as for 3D, im going with kobe. avatar is still up there for now.

but honestly speaking, this is for now the best 3D movie ive watched so far this year.

overall, money was well spent on toy story 3 3D


TSCalvin871989
post Jun 18 2010, 11:56 PM

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time to say one last goodbye to toy story 1,2 & 3 as this will be our last time watching them on the big screen.

wait, hold on. toy story 4 ? nah, but who knows. see you guys again on June 24th 2011.



http://pixarblog.blogspot.com/2010/06/toy-...ith-cars-2.html

QUOTE
Toy Story Toon coming with Cars 2

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Toy Story 3 director Lee Unkrich revealed in a just-published interview (and on Twitter) that there will be a new short film with the characters of Toy Story attached to Cars 2, in theatres June 24 next summer.

“Well, I really tried my best to end the story of Andy and his toys and bring that story to a close in a really nice way at the end of this film. That being said, we know that people love the characters, love Woody and Buzz, and would hate to say good-bye to them completely. I don’t know that there would ever be a ‘[Toy Story] 4.’ We don’t have any plans for one — but we are trying to find ways to keep the characters alive. We have announced we’re going to do a short film in front of ‘Cars 2′ that uses the ‘Toy Story’ characters. We’re going to keep them alive; they’re not going away forever.”

This will undoubtedly be one of the new Toy Story Toons produced at Pixar Canada in Vancouver and will probably play in addition to the regular theatrical short we've come to expect.

Very exciting news for those of us who were sad at the thought of never seeing the toys on the big screen again after Toy Story 3.

TSCalvin871989
post Jun 19 2010, 07:22 AM

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http://www.slashfilm.com/2010/06/18/armond...ie-of-all-time/

QUOTE
Toy Story 3 Finally Gets Negative Review, Becomes The Second Best Reviewed Movie Of All Time

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When the Rotten Tomatoes twitter account announced that Toy Story 3 still had a 100% fresh rating with over 130 reviews and counting, I got excited. I’ve seen the movie twice now, and it deserves all the praise it has and will recieve. The reason I got excited is that it had the chance to become the best reviewed movie in the history of cinema (this according to Rotten Tomatoes of course, albeit still a milestone achievement).

I’m not going to debate the merits of the achievement — best reviewed film of all time doesn’t mean best movie of all time. Also, as we know Rotten Tomatoes is not based on a scale of enjoyment, just thumbs up or down. Meaning, the best reviewed film of all time on Rotten Tomatoes means the largest percentage of possitive reviews.

With 147 100% positive reviews, Toy Story 2 has held the coveted top slot for eleven years and counting. The film to come closest was the 2008 documentary Man On Wire — 100% fresh with 142 reviews, six short of the #1 slot. And how fitting would it have been to have the Pixar’s latest film, the third film in the trilogy, knock Toy Story 2 from the top of the mountain.

What happened? You guessed it. Armond White — the notorious contrarian movie reviewer for the alt-weekly New York Press. You might recall that White was the first critic to give Pixar’s last film Up a negative review. Whats worse, he gave Jonah Hex a positive review, a film which has been panned by critics and moviegoers (12% on Rotten Tomatoes with almost 90 reviews).

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Here is an excerpt from White’s review of Toy Story 3 titled “BORED GAMES”:

QUOTE
Toy Story 3 is so besotted with brand names and product-placement that it stops being about the innocent pleasures of imagination—the usefulness of toys—and strictly celebrates consumerism.  … But none of these digital-cartoon characters reflect human experience; it’s essentially a bored game that only the brainwashed will buy into. Besides, Transformers 2 already explored the same plot to greater thrill and opulence. … When Toy Story 3 emulates the suspense of prison break and horror films, it becomes fitfully amusing (more than can be said for Wall-E or Up) but this humor depends on the recognition of worn-out toys which is no different from those lousy Shrek gags. … The Toy Story franchise isn’t for children and adults, it’s for non-thinking children and adults. When a movie is this formulaic, it’s no longer a toy because it does all the work for you. It’s a sap’s story.


Here is an excerpt from White’s review of Jonah Hex:

QUOTE
“Jonah Hex does for the western what the Crank movies do for the urban action film; simultaneously commenting on genre practice. … Hayward’s action scenes depict a terrorist environment way past Pixar-kiddieland. Bombs, flames, explosions carry 9/11 force, replete with hellhound and ravens—creatures whose myths help vanquish anxiety—all to a pounding score that re-routes death metal back to cathartic affirmation. … Without a $50 million ad budget to make Jonah Hex seem important, the media feels free to trash it—doing so exposes their collusion with marketing and refusal to read film for personal reflection. True art is watching hot-chick Megan Fox (as Lilah the hooker) fearlessly staring at the most grotesque side of Jonah’s face as if coming to grips with her own exploitation. Beautiful and brilliant. I previously remarked how “Neveldine-Taylor stand so lonely on the culture’s edge that their au courant ingenuity seems absolutely avant-garde when compared to standard box-office formula.” Greed is a cultural hex.”


I have no problem with a differing opinion at all — actually I welcome it. Especially an opinion that makes me reevaluate my experience, and the art. But White’s reviews don’t seem to serve that function. Instead, White gets off on being a contrarian, and nothing more. His list also includes unfavorable thumbs downs for Inglourious Basterds, District 9, The Wrestler, In The Loop, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince , 500 Days of Summer, Avatar, Up in the Air, The Princess and the Frog, An Education, Star Trek, Milk, Slumdog Millionaire, The Hangover, The Dark Knight, Gone Baby Gone, Iron Man, There Will Be Blood, and Zodiac. Did I mention that he gave Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen a positive review? Even Roger Ebert calls White “a troll.”

Oh well, the second best reviewed film of all time is still quite an achievement.

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Post note: After writing this story, another critic named Cole Smithey filed the second negative review for the film.

Update: Toy Story 3 director Lee Unkrich has sent out a tweet which appears to be a vague response to the two negative reviews:

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TSCalvin871989
post Jun 21 2010, 06:31 AM

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TOY STORY 3 was the 11th Pixar movie and it was the 11th Pixar movie to open at the #1 spot. Not too shabby. Oh, it also became the highest-grossing opener for Pixar of all-time, with $109M in its first three days, which shattered the old THE INCREDIBLES record, which stood at $71M. Of course, this film benefited from the ol' 3D trend as well, as 60% of its revenues were derived from 3D screens. For those wondering where the film places in terms of "largest openings of all-time", it's actually in 10th place on the overall list, which is headed by THE DARK KNIGHT ($158M), SPIDER-MAN 3 ($151M) and NEW MOON ($143M). In terms of animated movies, only SHREK 3 opened with more scratch, with $122M and in 6th place on the overall list

Best Pixar opening...ever!!! rclxms.gif

 

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