The Daily Telegraph

Toy Story 4

The children’s film that makes adults cry

- CHIEF FILM CRITIC Robbie Collin

U, 100 min Dir Josh Cooley

Starring Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Annie Potts, Tony Hale, Christina Hendricks, Keanu Reeves, Joan Cusack

‘The meaning of life is not something discovered, it is something moulded,” observed the French writer Antoine de Saint-exupéry. Make that injectionm­oulded. Considerin­g its characters are mass-produced PVC playthings, Pixar’s Toy Story has always been game to grapple with the big questions of life and purpose. Take the bit near the end of three when Woody (voiced by Tom Hanks), Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) and friends join hands as they slide towards a furnace. If there has been a more direct or humane exploratio­n of mortality in recent cinema than that, I must have missed it. This outstandin­g fourth instalment – released nine years

after the third, and a clear generation after the original – is no exception, and in fact uses the considerab­le passage of time since the first instalment as brutal existentia­l leverage.

Remember Woody’s exasperate­d yelp of “You … are … a … toy!”, when Buzz refused to accept he wasn’t a unique Space Ranger, but just the latest short-lived action figure? Well, Toy Story 4 has some bracing news: in a very real sense, so are you, so get playing now, because the jumble sale crate is closer than you might think.

That’s a roundabout way of saying that the last act of Toy Story 4 had me sobbing like a lawn sprinkler, but it juggles this stuff with some of the most purely delightful character animation I’ve ever seen and a script that made me shake with laughter at least once every five minutes. That all of these elements combine in dreamy harmony is testament to how much thought and care Pixar is still prepared to lavish on their crown-jewel franchise.

The highest compliment you can pay Toy Story 4 – which was directed by Josh Cooley, previously a co-writer and storyboard artist on the studio’s masterpiec­e, Inside Out – is that it’s a Toy Story film through and through.

Even so, it recognises that 1995 was an age ago, and Woody’s glory days as Andy’s favourite plaything are long past. At the end of Toy Story 3, he was passed on to preschoole­r Bonnie, but now he’s gathering dust in the cupboard Spinning a yarn: Woody (Tom Hanks) meets his old flame Bo Peep (Annie Potts) while a homemade knick-knack, Forky (Tony Hale) – a plastic spork with googly eyes, pipe-cleaner arms and lolly-stick feet – monopolise­s her affections. In short, Woody has become the toy equivalent of a widowed empty nester: being a favourite is all he’s known for years, and he’s quietly unnerved by the seeming purposeles­sness of this new phase of life. So whenever Forky goes missing, Woody gladly leaps into guardian angel mode, making it his new mission to keep Bonnie and her beloved piece of plastic cutlery united.

The initial separation­s are brief, uproarious and frequent. Forky sees himself as rubbish rather than a toy, and keeps trying to throw himself in the bin – a running gag so inspired and weird, it wouldn’t be out of place in a classic Fifties Chuck Jones cartoon. (The contrast between Forky’s jolting body language and the other toys’ smoother movements is sublime physical comedy.) Later on, however, Forky has to be prised from the ceramic clutches of Gabby Gabby (Christina Hendricks) – a vintage talking doll with a faulty pullstring, who dreams of being loved by a child who’ll overlook her broken voice-box; Gabby, who presides over a dusty antique shop like Norma Desmond swishing through her Sunset Boulevard mansion, is waited on by some deeply spooky Von Stroheimia­n ventriloqu­ist-dummy butlers.

The shop is also home to other half-forgotten playthings, including Duke Caboom (Keanu Reeves), an amusingly underwhelm­ing Canadian stuntman doll, and also Woody’s old flame Bo Peep (Annie Potts) – unceremoni­ously written out of the series between instalment­s two and three, here revived as a free spirit in retirement, sunnily embracing her newfound childlessn­ess.

Her and Woody’s reunion is one of the greatest, subtlest scenes in Pixar history: clutched by the same kid, they both remain frozen, and the film makes us project their upwelling emotions on to their motionless faces.

No other animation studio – in fact, make that studio full stop – would be brave enough to use stillness like that in a blockbuste­r release these days. But Toy Story 4 reaffirms that Pixar, at their best, are like no other animation studio around.

Toy Story 4 is released in UK cinemas on Friday June 21.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom