Una giocattolo cowboy è profondamente minacciato e geloso quando un nuovo giocattolo astronauta lo soppianta come un giocattolo preferito nella camera di un ragazzino.Una giocattolo cowboy è profondamente minacciato e geloso quando un nuovo giocattolo astronauta lo soppianta come un giocattolo preferito nella camera di un ragazzino.Una giocattolo cowboy è profondamente minacciato e geloso quando un nuovo giocattolo astronauta lo soppianta come un giocattolo preferito nella camera di un ragazzino.
- Candidato a 3 Oscar
- 29 vittorie e 24 candidature totali
Tim Allen
- Buzz Lightyear
- (voce)
Jim Varney
- Slinky Dog
- (voce)
Wallace Shawn
- Rex
- (voce)
John Ratzenberger
- Hamm
- (voce)
Annie Potts
- Bo Peep
- (voce)
John Morris
- Andy
- (voce)
Erik von Detten
- Sid
- (voce)
Laurie Metcalf
- Mrs. Davis
- (voce)
R. Lee Ermey
- Sergeant
- (voce)
Sarah Rayne
- Hannah
- (voce)
- (as Sarah Freeman)
Jack Angel
- Shark
- (voce)
- …
Greg Berg
- Local Announcer
- (voce)
Lisa Bradley
- Kid
- (voce)
Kendall Cunningham
- Kid
- (voce)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizSid Phillips is said to be inspired by a former Pixar employee of the same last name who was known to disassemble toys and use the parts to build bizarre creations.
- BlooperEven though Buzz believes he is a real space ranger and not a toy, he still freezes when people are around like the other toys do. Every time he freezes it is because Woody says "Freeze" and being a space ranger with years of training in covert missions, freeze means to be still.
- Curiosità sui creditiThis is the first Pixar film to feature the "Production Babies" section, which lists babies born to the crew members during production. This would become a trademark in the following years, in films like A Bug's Life: Megaminimondo (1998), Toy Story 2: Woody & Buzz alla riscossa (1999), Monsters & Co. (2001) and Alla ricerca di Nemo (2003).
- Versioni alternativeIn the 2015/2016 Blu-ray/DVD/Digital HD release, the original 1990 Walt Disney Pictures logo was replaced with the 2011 variant of the current 2006 Walt Disney Pictures logo.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Gamesmaster: Episodio #5.9 (1995)
- Colonne sonoreYou've Got a Friend in Me
Written, Performed, and Produced by Randy Newman
Randy Newman appears courtesy of Reprise Records
Recensione in evidenza
Just in case you were also wondering what happened to all the toys that went missing when you were a kid, the answer is clear: They escaped.
"Toy Story" is the kind of children's movie adults can enjoy just as much, because it very cleverly mines deep deposits of nostalgia from the memory banks. That may be the reason the 1990s bedroom of young Andy is populated by playthings of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. If Andy was a real boy of his time, there would be a computer and a TV/Nintendo, and not much else.
The voicings of the various toys add to the enjoyability. Tom Hanks was the biggest star of the moment when "Toy Story" came out, and he works with that likeability by creating a stable center as Woody the cowboy doll. Don Rickles has the screen role of his career (not that "Kelly's Heroes" was Oscar material) as a prickly Mr. Potato Head, while Jim Varney and R. Lee Ermey are standouts in the supporting cast.
Tim Allen gives the movie's best performance, as a newfangled toy that takes Woody's place in Andy's heart but can't bring himself to accept that he's just a plastic plaything. It's the role of the story that gives him the best lines ("I don't believe that man has ever been to medical school"), but Allen delivers them with real panache. He more than holds his own, and you kind of see where he took off with that note-perfect William Shatner parody he perfected on screen in the underrated "Galaxy Quest."
While this movie's use of computer animation makes it a milestone, it neither represents the most innovative use of the technology or the cleverest Pixar-ated treatment of a story. "A Bug's Life" seems a more worthy apex; that story was funnier, worked better on its own merits, and used the animation to better effect. But given how novel all of this was in 1995, "Toy Story" could have been a lot less thought-through than it was, and still made gobs of money. The fact it is instead invested with real heart, and can be watched and enjoyed today just as easily as when it debuted nearly 10 years ago, is a tribute to the people behind it.
I like Randy Newman's music, just not here, and while the animation textures are surprisingly lifelike, there are places, especially with Scud the dog but also with the baby's drool, where it falls short. The story itself gets kind of rote with repeat viewings, though the transition to Sid's bedroom and its sad mutilated toys is a genius moment. So too are the vending machine aliens, who gape in rapt wonder at the judgment of "the claw." If it reached for pathos a little less often, "Toy Story" would be an undeniable classic.
As it is, it is very, very good, the kind of film that's only good for children, even (especially?) the inner ones.
"Toy Story" is the kind of children's movie adults can enjoy just as much, because it very cleverly mines deep deposits of nostalgia from the memory banks. That may be the reason the 1990s bedroom of young Andy is populated by playthings of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. If Andy was a real boy of his time, there would be a computer and a TV/Nintendo, and not much else.
The voicings of the various toys add to the enjoyability. Tom Hanks was the biggest star of the moment when "Toy Story" came out, and he works with that likeability by creating a stable center as Woody the cowboy doll. Don Rickles has the screen role of his career (not that "Kelly's Heroes" was Oscar material) as a prickly Mr. Potato Head, while Jim Varney and R. Lee Ermey are standouts in the supporting cast.
Tim Allen gives the movie's best performance, as a newfangled toy that takes Woody's place in Andy's heart but can't bring himself to accept that he's just a plastic plaything. It's the role of the story that gives him the best lines ("I don't believe that man has ever been to medical school"), but Allen delivers them with real panache. He more than holds his own, and you kind of see where he took off with that note-perfect William Shatner parody he perfected on screen in the underrated "Galaxy Quest."
While this movie's use of computer animation makes it a milestone, it neither represents the most innovative use of the technology or the cleverest Pixar-ated treatment of a story. "A Bug's Life" seems a more worthy apex; that story was funnier, worked better on its own merits, and used the animation to better effect. But given how novel all of this was in 1995, "Toy Story" could have been a lot less thought-through than it was, and still made gobs of money. The fact it is instead invested with real heart, and can be watched and enjoyed today just as easily as when it debuted nearly 10 years ago, is a tribute to the people behind it.
I like Randy Newman's music, just not here, and while the animation textures are surprisingly lifelike, there are places, especially with Scud the dog but also with the baby's drool, where it falls short. The story itself gets kind of rote with repeat viewings, though the transition to Sid's bedroom and its sad mutilated toys is a genius moment. So too are the vending machine aliens, who gape in rapt wonder at the judgment of "the claw." If it reached for pathos a little less often, "Toy Story" would be an undeniable classic.
As it is, it is very, very good, the kind of film that's only good for children, even (especially?) the inner ones.
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 30.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 223.225.679 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 29.140.617 USD
- 26 nov 1995
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 394.436.586 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 21 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Dolby Stereo(original version)
- Spectra-Stereo(original version)
- Dolby Digital
- Proporzioni
- 1.78 : 1 / (high definition)
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