This review may contain spoilers!
Toy Story 5 is Pixar's latest return to Andy, now Bonnie's collection of toys and their wild adventures. In this feature, when Bonnie receives a new device called Lilypad, the toys have to work out how to fit into a world where technology is everywhere kids play.
The story here is absolutely wonderful; it's always this warm moment returning to these familiar characters and the type of adventures they find themselves getting into. This particular story tackles what play looks like these days. On the surface, it could be a story that just blindingly states technology is bad, and it's bad for your kids! But it manages to be a little more nuanced than that. After all, we already saw toys transition from Woody to Buzz Lightyear in the first feature. This is a film that points out that play can now look like a child sitting upon a tablet, playing repetitive games with friends and messaging in group chats. It can be watching videos and taking silly photos. Toy Story 5 is clever because it tells us the impact playing with devices can have on children versus the effect of a treasured toy.
Jessie takes charge in this movie. With Woody off rescuing forgotten toys out in the wider world, Jessie is now the Sheriff of Bonnie's toys. She and the usual crew do all they can to keep Bonnie entertained and spark her imagination. Yet, Bonnie is quite alone, and she struggles to make friends with others. When her parents buy her a new device, Lilypad, to support this problem, Bonnie can't put Lilypad down. Suddenly, she's in a group chat, she has a circle of friends, and she gets invited to her first sleepover. But Bonnie's attention is held by her device; she struggles to detach from it. She also winds up becoming dependent on Lilypad to keep her newfound friends. It's a really clever way of exploring the themes of technology and children, making it clear the ways these devices can be disruptive at a young age. At the same time, Jessie meets another child's old toys, early devices that bridged the gap between toy and tech. She learns that these toys do care about their kid, too, and that they're capable of sparking imagination and being involved in play. It becomes a film that gets to the conversation about play, imagination, and joy, and about knowing how devices can be part of that at a young age.
Having this film led by Jessie was a great move by the creatives behind 5. Jessie is voiced wonderfully by Joan Cusack, who really puts that resolute mettle into the animated sheriff. Jessie is like the audience at first; she sees technology in a black-and-white way. Devices aren't as good as toys, so they merely become a 'bad thing'. But after Jessie accidentally winds up at Blaze's house, she is greeted by Smarty Pants (Conan O'Brien), an old school device who meant a lot to his kid. Jessie's assumptions are challenged while she also teaches those devices to understand what play is for a kid. Jessie also has to face the feeling of being unwanted by her kid, a feeling that stings more as a third-generation kid toy. The moment in which Jessie is confronted by the impact she left upon her first kid is the best aspect of this film. It's a real heartwarming tear-jerker that gets to the heart of what Toy Story has always done best.
When this film opened up, a shipwrecked island full of advanced Buzz Lightyear toys, my jaw dropped. Not because the idea of so many Buzz Lightyears was a crazy thing to me, but because of the animation. If you want to look at the journey of an animation studio, watch the Toy Story films in release order. This film is Pixar at its very best right now. There is incredible attention to detail, the colours are dazzling, and the character designs are all unique. The small posse of Buzz Lightyears yielded a lot for this film in more ways than one. The score for the feature pulls out every stop when those guys are onscreen, resulting in some epic moments and some absolute hilarity. Toy Story 5 manages to do it all, even bring Taylor Swift back to her country roots a little with 'I Knew It, I Knew You'.
Even the moments of the familiar feel well-earned, like the audience gets to come home again. You have Tim Allen's Buzz continuing to play head over heels for Jessie while Tom Hanks' Woody strides in looking to save the day. This duo isn't leading this time, and yet it works fine without; having their friendly rivalry is all that's required. I enjoyed some of the new voices that have found their way into the Toy Story world; the obvious one is Greta Lee's Lilypad. Lilypad walks a fine line between antagonist and misguided new toy in a way that reminded me of Buzz. There are lots of neat new moments, like Ernie Hudson's hysterical take on the Combat Carl toy.
Toy Story 5 fails in a way that made me think of Toy Story 4 a lot. It forgets how to be an ensemble animated feature. The other toys are still here, but they're afterthoughts and don't get to stand for themselves. Those first three movies made me really love characters like Slinky, the Potato Heads, Rex, Hamm and Bo Peep; even more recent additions like Forky and Duke Caboom are pushed to the back. All of the toys make the room come to life; they just needed a little more voice to remind the audience of that.
I have never watched a Toy Story that doesn't have a great story to tell, nor fails to connect with my inner child. I would give Toy Story 5 a 9/10.






