
When Bonnie receives a Lilypad tablet as a gift and becomes obsessed, Buzz, Woody, Jessie and the rest of the gang's jobs become exponentially harder when they have to go head to head with the all-new threat to playtime.
Pixar
$250,000,000
Toy Story 5 is a heartwarming return to the beloved franchise that combines nostalgia with fresh storytelling. The animation is stunning, the voice cast delivers exceptional performances, and the emotional depth rivals even the original films. A must-watch for families and animation fans alike. For more entertainment recommendations, check out <a href="https://santa-lou.com/">kakadu casino</a>.
The movie series that would've had a perfect ending with Toy Story 3 manages to, once more, not screw up with another sequel.
Even though there is a pretty clear and potent message here, this isn't my favourite from the franchise - in fact, in many ways it reminded me of what I felt was the much more engaging "Ron's Gone Wrong" (2021). "Bonnie" is a lonely little girl who still plays with her toys. This earns her the ridicule of her more tech-savvy classmates at school and so, despondent, her parents buy her a "Lilypad". This promises to be her route to inclusion and popularity and soon she is even being invited to a sleepover. She takes "Jessie" and "Blaze" with her and next day returns crestfallen, realising that her love for them is the source of her misery. "Lilypad" decides that action must be taken so starts to manipulate her messages so that the toys are confined to a box in the garage. That's when they send for "Woody". He and his friends must now find a way to free their boxed up companions and help them recover their place in her heart before "Lilypad" has them consigned to a charity shop. Crucial to their success might be "Smarty Pants". This is an early digital gizmo that has also been consigned to the back of a drawer as it'd been superceded and so in a sorry state with no battery power, these unlikely allies realise that they must work together to find "Bonnie" a real and much less fickle friend. Perhaps it's just the slightly over sentimental characterisation of "Bonnie" but this film seemed to take an age to get going and then when it did it forgot to remember that growing up involves a shedding of skins - physically and metaphorically. We all have favourite toys, records, clothes that we are joined at the hip with until we ultimately discard - and the emotional heart-strings this tries to tug all ran just a bit counter-intuitively for me. Sure, it offers us an indictment of a prevailing trend amidst society at large to rely on technology to do more and more for us, and to insulate us from the fun and perils of actually growing up with real people, but the ending maybe just diluted that a little too conveniently and I found there to be quite a lot less humour for us here, too. It's still good fun with plenty of adventures but maybe it's not just "Woody" et al that need to be put to bed, now?