IMDb RATING
6.2/10
5.7K
YOUR RATING
Buzz Lightyear must battle Emperor Zurg with the help of three hopefuls who insist on being his partners.Buzz Lightyear must battle Emperor Zurg with the help of three hopefuls who insist on being his partners.Buzz Lightyear must battle Emperor Zurg with the help of three hopefuls who insist on being his partners.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Tim Allen
- Buzz Lightyear
- (voice)
Nicole Sullivan
- Mira Nova
- (voice)
Larry Miller
- XR
- (voice)
Stephen Furst
- Booster
- (voice)
Wayne Knight
- Zurg
- (voice)
Adam Carolla
- Commander Nebula
- (voice)
Diedrich Bader
- Warp Darkmatter
- (voice)
- …
Patrick Warburton
- LGM
- (voice)
Cindy Warden
- Technician
- (voice)
- …
Frank Welker
- Grubs
- (voice)
- …
Sean Hayes
- Brain Pod #13
- (voice)
- (as Sean P. Hayes)
Andrew Stanton
- Hamm
- (voice)
R. Lee Ermey
- Sarge
- (voice)
Wallace Shawn
- Rex
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsWhen X-R enters the conference room to propose a negotiation plan, there is a blonde female Ranger behind him whose ponytail disappears. In the next cut, her ponytail is back again.
- Quotes
Evil Emperor Zurg: If you want something turned evil, turn it evil yourself. That's what Nana Zurg always used to say to me, and she was plenty evil.
- Alternate versionsWhen the movie was serialized in Buzz Lightyear of Star Command (2000), Tim Allen's lines were replaced by the original vocal tracks of Patrick Warburton, who plays Buzz on the series.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Best Straight to DVD Disney Sequels (2016)
- SoundtracksTo Infinity and Beyond
Written by Fred LaBour
Performed by William Shatner and the Star Command Chorus
Featured review
In "Toy Story 2," Woody finds out that he came from the TV show "Woody's Roundup"; Buzz Lightyear did it the other way around and for real. The trouble is that "Buzz Lightyear of Star Command" never really worked as a series, and this video feature doesn't really cut it - and that's without taking either of its truly great predecessors into consideration. If you do...
Essentially a feature-length pilot for the TV series*, "Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins" opens with a Pixar-animated prologue wherein Andy's toys get ready to watch the very movie we're about to (the subsequent series also begins with Buzz, Woody, Slinky etc congregating in front of the TV); the point of this is never clear, especially since Woody's reference to how Buzz is drawn underlines how different the two ventures are. The story has Buzz and his partner Warp Darkmatter rescuing three Little Green Men from Emperor Zurg, but when Warp is killed in the fighting our hero swears he won't have any partners anymore; as fans of the show know he wound up with three of them anyway, and this relates how he got together with Mira, Booster and XR.
The movie's got its moments (like the throwaway gag where XR reads a Victoria's Circuit catalogue) and it's hardly boring, but I can't imagine many viewers who've seen more than, oh, five movies being surprised at the movie's biggest plot twist; and the wit and depth of the previous movies is sucked out, leaving little more than a standard comedy-action cartoon. True, it makes sense that a toy like Buzz would inspire a cash-in TV series in the world according to "Toy Story," but do we actually have to see it? Watchable but bland; however, you can't deny that "He-Man" et al never had end credit songs from William Shatner(!).
*Like several other Disney TV cartoons ("TaleSpin," "Chip'N'Dale Rescue Rangers"), the pilot was later edited down and shown on the series in several parts, in this case three. In that version (those versions?), Shatner's song and the prologue with the video are absent, and Tim Allen's voice is replaced by Patrick Warburton, who provided Buzz's voice on the series.
Essentially a feature-length pilot for the TV series*, "Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins" opens with a Pixar-animated prologue wherein Andy's toys get ready to watch the very movie we're about to (the subsequent series also begins with Buzz, Woody, Slinky etc congregating in front of the TV); the point of this is never clear, especially since Woody's reference to how Buzz is drawn underlines how different the two ventures are. The story has Buzz and his partner Warp Darkmatter rescuing three Little Green Men from Emperor Zurg, but when Warp is killed in the fighting our hero swears he won't have any partners anymore; as fans of the show know he wound up with three of them anyway, and this relates how he got together with Mira, Booster and XR.
The movie's got its moments (like the throwaway gag where XR reads a Victoria's Circuit catalogue) and it's hardly boring, but I can't imagine many viewers who've seen more than, oh, five movies being surprised at the movie's biggest plot twist; and the wit and depth of the previous movies is sucked out, leaving little more than a standard comedy-action cartoon. True, it makes sense that a toy like Buzz would inspire a cash-in TV series in the world according to "Toy Story," but do we actually have to see it? Watchable but bland; however, you can't deny that "He-Man" et al never had end credit songs from William Shatner(!).
*Like several other Disney TV cartoons ("TaleSpin," "Chip'N'Dale Rescue Rangers"), the pilot was later edited down and shown on the series in several parts, in this case three. In that version (those versions?), Shatner's song and the prologue with the video are absent, and Tim Allen's voice is replaced by Patrick Warburton, who provided Buzz's voice on the series.
- Victor Field
- Feb 1, 2003
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Movie
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 10 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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