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Toy Story Poster

Toy Story

The adventure takes off when toys come to life!
1995 | 81m | English

(1142983 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 25 (history)

Details

Led by Woody, Andy's toys live happily in his room until Andy's birthday brings Buzz Lightyear onto the scene. Afraid of losing his place in Andy's heart, Woody plots against Buzz. But when circumstances separate Buzz and Woody from their owner, the duo eventually learns to put aside their differences.
Release Date: Nov 22, 1995
Director: John Lasseter
Writer: Alec Sokolow, Joss Whedon, Andrew Stanton, Joel Cohen, Pete Docter, Joe Ranft, John Lasseter
Genres: Animation, Family, Comedy, Adventure
Keywords jealousy, villain, friendship, bullying, elementary school, friends, rivalry, rescue, computer animation, mission, anthropomorphism, buddy, walkie talkie, toy car, boy next door, new toy, neighborhood, toy comes to life, resourcefulness, toy, pixar
Production Companies Pixar
Box Office Revenue: $394,436,586
Budget: $30,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 04, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Tom Hanks Woody (voice)
Tim Allen Buzz Lightyear (voice)
Don Rickles Mr. Potato Head (voice)
Jim Varney Slinky Dog (voice)
Wallace Shawn Rex (voice)
John Ratzenberger Hamm (voice)
Annie Potts Bo Peep (voice)
John Morris Andy (voice)
Erik von Detten Sid (voice)
Laurie Metcalf Mrs. Davis (voice)
R. Lee Ermey Sergeant (voice)
Sarah Freeman Hannah (voice)
Penn Jillette TV Announcer (voice)
Jack Angel Shark / Rocky Gibraltar (voice)
Spencer Aste Wounded Soldier (voice)
Greg Berg Local Announcer (voice)
Lisa Bradley Kid (voice)
Kendall Cunningham Kid (voice)
Debi Derryberry Aliens / Pizza Planet Announcer (voice)
Cody Dorkin Kid (voice)
Bill Farmer Monotone Announcer (voice)
Craig Good Mission Control (voice)
Gregory Grudt Kid (voice)
Danielle Judovits Burned Rag Doll (voice)
Sam Lasseter Kid (voice)
Brittany Levenbrown Kid (voice)
Sherry Lynn Mom (voice)
Scott McAfee Kid (voice)
Mickie McGowan Sid's Mom (voice)
Ryan O'Donohue Kid (voice)
Jeff Pidgeon Aliens / Robot / Mr. Spell (voice)
Patrick Pinney Pizza Delivery Guy / Angry Driver #2 (voice)
Phil Proctor Pizza Planet Announcer / Pizza Planet Guard (voice)
Jan Rabson Gas Station Attendant (voice)
Joe Ranft Lenny the Binoculars (voice)
Andrew Stanton Commercial Chorus (voice)
Shane Sweet Kid (voice)
Name Job
Alec Sokolow Screenplay
Kim Blanchette Animation
Dale E. Grahn Color Timer
Robin Cooper CG Painter
Patsy Bouge Post Production Supervisor
Norm DeCarlo Sculptor
William Reeves Supervising Technical Director
Karen Robert Jackson Production Supervisor
Chris Montan Executive Music Producer
Rich Quade Animation Director
Michael Berenstein Animation
Davey Crockett Feiten Animation
Angie Glocka Animation
Rex Grignon Animation
Tom K. Gurney Animation
Karen Kiser Animation
Anthony B. LaMolinara Animation
Les Major Animation
Glenn McQueen Animation
Mark Oftedal Animation
Jeff Pratt Animation
Steve Rabatich Animation
Steve Segal Animation
Doug Sheppeck Animation
Alan Sperling Animation
David Tart Animation
Ken Willard Animation
Thomas Porter Visual Effects Supervisor
Mark Thomas Henne Visual Effects
Oren Jacob Visual Effects
Darwyn Peachey Visual Effects
Mitch Prater Visual Effects
Brian M. Rosen Visual Effects
Sharon Calahan Lighting Supervisor
Colin Brady Animation
William Cone Character Designer, CG Painter
Shelley Daniels Lekven Sculptor
Dan Haskett Character Designer
Jean Gillmore Character Designer
Kelly O'Connell Set Dresser
Ann M. Rockwell Set Dresser
Julie M. McDonald Camera Department Manager, Editorial Manager
Robin Lee Assistant Editor
Tom Freeman Assistant Editor
Ada Cochavi Assistant Editor
Dana Mulligan Assistant Editor
Deirdre Morrison Editorial Coordinator
Lori Lombardo Production Coordinator
Ellen Devine Production Coordinator
Lauren Beth Strogoff Unit Publicist
Gary Summers Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Tim Holland Supervising Sound Editor
Marilyn McCoppen ADR Editor
Pat Jackson Sound Effects Editor
Mary Helen Leasman Foley Editor
J.R. Grubbs Assistant Sound Editor
Susan Sanford Assistant Sound Editor
Susan Popovic Assistant Sound Editor
Dan Engstrom Assistant Sound Editor
Ruth Lambert Casting Consultant
James Flamberg Music Editor
Mary Beth Smith Negative Cutter
Rick Mackay Negative Cutter
Sonoko Konishi Set Dresser
Robert Gordon Editor
Maureen Wylie Animation Department Coordinator
Triva von Klark Animation Manager
B.Z. Petroff Animation Manager
Terry McQueen Art Department Manager
Victoria Jaschob Assistant Production Coordinator
Lucas Putnam Assistant Production Coordinator
Douglas Todd Lighting Coordinator
Terri Greening Production Accountant
Don Conway Camera Technician
Meredith Layne Casting Assistant
Louis Rivera Camera Supervisor
David H. Ching Information Systems Manager
Jesse William Wallace Editorial Production Assistant
Lisa Ellis Finance
Tom Barwick Foley
Dennie Thorpe Foley
Tony Eckert Foley
Barbara T. Labounta Lighting Coordinator
Ewan Johnson Lighting Technician
Michael E. Murdock Systems Administrators & Support
Deirdre Warin Shading, Modeling
Mark Adams Lighting Artist, Modeling
Deborah R. Fowler Modeling
Damir Frkovic Lighting Artist, Modeling
Shalini Govil-Pai Lighting Artist, Modeling
David R. Haumann Lighting Artist, Modeling
Kevin Bjorke Modeling
Yael Milo Lighting Artist, Modeling
Tod Cooper Music Supervisor
Rich Mackay Negative Cutter
Andrew Caldwell Production Intern
Martín Caplan Production Intern
Ryan Chisum Production Intern
Takeshi Hasegawa Production Intern
Jay Hathaway Production Intern
Jason Henry Production Intern
Steven Kani Production Intern
Kevin Page Production Intern
Benjamin Salles Production Intern
Dave Thomas Production Intern
Victoria Livingstone Production Intern
Nancy Copeland Production Office Assistant
Alethea Harampolis Production Office Assistant
Christian Hill Production Office Assistant
Rob Cook Software Engineer
Pat Hanrahan Software Engineer
Jim Lawson Software Engineer
M.W. Mantle Software Engineer
David Salesin Software Engineer
Don Schreiter Software Engineer
Daniel McCoy Software Engineer
Mark T. VandeWettering Software Engineer, Lighting Artist
Anthony A. Apodaca Software Engineer, Shading, Lighting Artist
Keith B.C. Gordon Shading
Larry Gritz Shading, Lighting Artist
Bill Carson Software Engineer
Ken Huey Software Engineer
Mark Dornfeld Title Graphics
Mark Eastwood Modeling
Monique Hodgkinson Modeling
Grey Holland Modeling
Matthew Luhn Animation
Eben Ostby Visual Effects Technical Director
Matthew Martin Camera Technician
Larry Aupperle Lighting Artist
Cynthia Dueltgen Lighting Artist
Heather Knight Animation
Steve Johnson Software Engineer
Roger Rose Animation
Perry Farinola Storyboard Artist
Jason Katz Storyboard Artist
Bob McKnight Character Designer
Andrew L. Schmidt Animation
Joss Whedon Screenplay
Andrew Stanton Original Story, Character Designer, Storyboard Artist, Screenplay
Joel Cohen Screenplay
Lee Unkrich Editor
Ralph Eggleston Art Direction
Ash Brannon Animation Director, Storyboard Artist
Hal Hickel Animation
Guionne Leroy Animation
Jeff Pidgeon Storyboard Artist, Animation
Doug Sweetland Animation
Bud Luckey Character Designer, Storyboard Artist, Animation
Tom Myers Sound Design Assistant
Don Davis Orchestrator
Gary Rydstrom Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Sound Designer
Jimmy Hayward Animation
Galyn Susman Lighting Supervisor
Tom Holloway Character Designer
Mickie McGowan ADR Voice Casting
Tia W. Kratter Lead Painter
Shawn Krause Animation
Pete Docter Original Story, Supervising Animator, Storyboard Artist
Graham Walters Shading, Modeling
Mike Fenton Casting
Janet Hirshenson Casting
Jonas Rivera Production Office Assistant
Joe Ranft Original Story, Story Supervisor
Robert Lence Story Supervisor
Kelly Asbury Storyboard Artist
Mike Cachuela Storyboard Artist
Jill Culton Storyboard Artist
Chris Sanders Character Designer
Bob Peterson Animation
Armen Ksajikian Musician
Randy Newman Original Music Composer, Orchestrator, Songs
John Lasseter Original Story, Director
Kevin Reher Production Controller
Miguel Ángel Poveda Post Production Coordinator
Susan Bradley Title Designer
William Joyce Concept Artist
Name Title
Ralph Guggenheim Producer
Bonnie Arnold Producer
Edwin Catmull Executive Producer
Steve Jobs Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Golden Globes Best Animated Feature N/A Won
Spirit Awards Best Animated Feature N/A Won
BAFTA Awards Best Animated Feature N/A Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 164 270 111
2024 5 256 298 222
2024 6 196 263 123
2024 7 145 189 113
2024 8 129 184 100
2024 9 105 119 84
2024 10 117 192 83
2024 11 126 177 102
2024 12 122 141 104
2025 1 138 191 102
2025 2 108 152 24
2025 3 41 144 4
2025 4 27 32 20
2025 5 24 34 20
2025 6 23 28 19
2025 7 20 22 17
2025 8 19 27 16
2025 9 28 32 23
2025 10 24 25 23

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 53 157
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 13 75
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 43 170
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 47 170
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 46 167
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 48 146
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 33 156
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 71 196
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 63 186
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 69 165
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 68 194
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 43 193
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 90 230
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 93 159
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 79 156

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Reviews

Ruuz
8.0

This movie came out when I was three. Now I'm twenty seven and the goddamn thing still holds up. _Final rating:★★★★ - Very strong appeal. A personal favourite._ ...

Jun 23, 2021
JPV852
9.0

Decided to revisit this after many years and still holds up so well. Great movie for both kids and adults with wonderful teachable moments. Just a groundbreaking animated movie all around. **4.5/5** ...

Jun 23, 2021
r96sk
10.0

A stunning feature film entrance from Pixar! <em>'Toy Story'</em> is a true delight, from the first second to the last. The CGI animation is excellent. All the toys look brilliant, as does the world itself - I love the feel of it. The music is very good, Randy Newman does a nice job - "You've Got ... a Friend in Me" is a cracker. Tom Hanks leads a strong cast. Hanks plays Woody, to fantastic effect. He is the best part of this film. Tim Allen is great, too, as Buzz Lightyear. Don Rickles (Mr. Potato Head), Wallace Shawn (Rex) and John Ratzenberger (Hamm) also bring fun. Everything else is just as terrific: the humour, the pacing, the plot - I enjoy it all. There are probably some flaws in parts, namely Buzz's supposed unawareness, but nothing impacts the viewing experience. Go watch!

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
7.0

Every now and again when you watch antiques programmes on television and somebody turns up with a toy in it's original box - that turns out to be worth more than his car - I regret that I no longer possess any from my childhood. I do recall, however, being especially fickle - the favourite one day w ... as never likely to reign long before being supplanted by another. That's the case here for cowboy "Woody". He is the favourite of owner "Andy" amongst, it has to be said, rather a lot of different ones. Until, that is - one birthday, we meet Space Ranger "Buzz Lightyear". He's actually quite an affable chap, but the green eyed monster is now in charge and "Woody" tries to relegate his successor down the side of the bed. That goes wrong and, accidentally, out of the window he goes. The other toys are horrified, leaving "Woody" with no option but to get over his laser envy, rescue his new rival and repatriate him before the whole family move to a new home! What now ensues are some fun escapades, near misses and they fall into the hands of another young boy who really does want to blast "Buzz" into space. The vocal talents of Tom Hanks and Tim Allen are enthusiastic and entertaining, those of Don Rickles ("Mr. Potato Head") sometimes a little nearer the bone for the grown ups and they are all helped along by a good soundtrack and a wittily written script offering us plenty of scenarios that draw the viewer (of whatever age) into this simple, pretty timeless story. It's interesting, for 1995, to note the wide variety of toys this young boy has, too - no gender stereotyping, which is quite refreshing. This is quickly paced and enjoyable animation that touches on the values of trust, companionship and team spirt - as well as the demerits of envy and selfishness - and I really enjoyed it.

Jun 15, 2022
TheFilmBuff1990
N/A

Toy Story (1995)– A Groundbreaking Animated Classic That Still Shines When Toy Story was released in 1995, it wasn’t just another animated film—it was a revolution. As the first feature-length movie created entirely with CGI, Pixar’s debut film set a new standard for storytelling, animation, and ... emotional depth in family films. Nearly three decades later, Toy Story remains as charming, funny, and heartfelt as ever. A Story That Captivates All Ages At its core, Toy Story is a tale of friendship, jealousy, and personal growth. The film follows Woody (Tom Hanks), a cowboy doll and the leader of Andy’s toys, whose world is turned upside down when the flashy, space-themed Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) arrives. Woody’s initial resentment towards Buzz—who doesn’t even realize he’s a toy—sparks an entertaining rivalry that soon turns into an unforgettable adventure. The journey teaches both characters valuable lessons about teamwork, self-worth, and loyalty, making the film resonate deeply with audiences of all ages. Unforgettable Characters & Voice Performances One of Toy Story’s greatest strengths is its memorable characters, each with distinct personalities that feel real. Tom Hanks brings warmth and humor to Woody, portraying his insecurities and leadership with depth. Tim Allen’s Buzz Lightyear is both hilarious and endearing, with his delusional hero complex creating some of the film’s funniest moments. The supporting cast—Don Rickles as the grumpy Mr. Potato Head, Wallace Shawn as the nervous Rex, and Annie Potts as the kind-hearted Bo Peep—adds layers of charm and humor. Revolutionary Animation That Still Holds Up For a film made in the mid-’90s, Toy Story’s animation remains impressive. While Pixar’s later works have refined their techniques, the film’s colorful visuals, expressive character animations, and attention to detail still make it a joy to watch. The animators brilliantly bring the toys to life, giving each one unique movements that reflect their materials—Woody’s floppy limbs, Buzz’s rigid plastic movements, and Slinky Dog’s springy physics. A Timeless Message With Heart Beyond its technical achievements, Toy Story endures because of its emotional depth. Themes of friendship, acceptance, and finding one’s place in the world are beautifully woven into the narrative. Woody and Buzz’s journey from rivals to best friends is one of the most iconic character arcs in animated history. The film also cleverly explores a child’s imagination, capturing the magic of toys coming to life when no one’s watching. Final Thoughts Toy Story isn’t just a great animated film—it’s one of the greatest films ever made. It revolutionized the animation industry, introduced beloved characters, and delivered a heartfelt story that remains as impactful today as it was in 1995. Whether you’re watching it for the first time or revisiting it as an adult, Toy Story is a masterpiece that continues to entertain, inspire, and remind us why we fell in love with movies in the first place. ⭐ Rating: 10/10

Mar 28, 2025