Why isn bo in toy story 3




















If there is that need, you'd expect that to be the kind of system that would be set up, though it is crude, maybe there would be exceptions made. If the toys in the Butterfly Room have been there a while, they would also have been through the Caterpillar Room themselves; I'd expect them to be resentful if the new toys wanted to dodge the duty that everyone went through, putting the older toys' lives at risk if one day the Caterpillar Room is empty of toys and one of the adults picks up some to go there.

There are reasons to presume there is a need or presumed need to put toys in the Caterpillar Room. Woody complains Andy's toys aren't age-appropriate for the little kids. If there were enough age-appropriate toys, wouldn't they be in that room out of choice? Or would they avoid it to have better company and the repair facilities of the Butterfly Room. The Caterpillar Room seems largely empty. As a simple question, does the room need toys to be played with?

Or are the little kids to play only with the other stuff? Or do the toys just imagine the need to give the little kids toys out of toy-instinct? There are though other reasons Lotso might try to push the new toys into the Caterpillar Room. It could help to ensure the newcomers not make trouble for the group when they are allowed to become full members of the daycare-toy society, or it could just be a way to keep them loyal to his rule, allowing the newcomers in in only when they are loyal to him without a particular concern for the needs of the community.

It's not that I sympathize with Lotso, he's a jerk, and I liked the movie, but when Barbie returned to the daycare everything was supposed to be brilliant.

If there really was a problem that necessitated rationing toys between the room so that the older toys weren't killed, it wouldn't just go away because they have a democracy. The only thing that would stop it would be if a large number of little kids' toys arrived offscreen. Community Showcase More. Follow TV Tropes. You need to login to do this. Get Known if you don't have an account. When Buzz is finally back to normal near the end of the film he smells the area in the dump and says "That wasn't me was it?

Love the rest of the movie, that was just a part that kind of bothered me. Why did Andy just gave away Woody at the end of the film. Sure Bonnie is cute and all, but does that really constitute giving away one of the last remaining shreds of his Disappeared Dad 's memory? Woody wasn't just a toy, he was a family heirloom.

Finn : I didn't have a father. Someone I could look up to. Model myself after. Someone who could show me what it really meant to be a man. Just one quick question. Couldn't only the new Buzz with utility belt do this from Toy Story 2? How did Buzz magically get glowy powers? Or maybe I'm missing something What was wrong with the "malfunctioning toy recall" plot that got rejected for the third movie? I would honestly like the official word on why it was rejected. The new script where the toys are abandoned at a day care center after the kid heads to college sounds like a rehash of the first two movies, quite honestly - just the same old "how the toys deal with abandonment" plot.

At least the toy recall script brought something new to the table, mainly what the toys feel when they're malfunctioning and have to be recalled, doomed to be destroyed through no fault of their own.

Why would a Buzz Lightyear even have a reset button? He's just an action figure. So, is adult Andy just a huge moron? The full set was worth tens or maybe hundreds of thousands of dollars more than a luggage guy makes in a year. Sure, the set would lose value without Stinky Pete, and undoubtedly writing his name on their feet probably lost a few thousand bucks of value, but still, the set minus one with minor damage nothing a restorer couldn't fix anyway still has to be worth a great deal money.

Why would he pass up something like that and just toss them to some daycare center? Furthermore, Woody is a family toy, passed down from generations for what seems to be about thirty years. Seems kinda mean of Andy just to toss it.

I understand him donating the more generic toys, but why get rid of the valuable toys? Buzz Lightyear was made in Taiwan. So why is he reset into Spanish? Sure it's Rule of Funny , but it just doesn't make any sense. In the Toy Story 3 novelization by adaptation author Jasmine Jones, in the scene where the toys first arrive at Sunnyside, the three alien toys see a crane toy that circles them.

They say "The Claw! I know for a fact this happens in the movie. Those three aliens were originally in the Pizza Planet truck that Andy's toys commandeered to chase Al to the airport. Potato Head rescued them, and they came home to Andy's house. Andy didn't win them. How exactly did Lotso stay smelling like strawberries when he was rolling around in the dump? At the end of the movie, Andy tells Bonnie Jessie's real name, and talks about her caring for critters and stuff.

At first, I assumed that Andy got that info from the internet. But that just created all sorts of questions about how much Andy found out about Woody's Roundup. Surely he did at some point, right? In the beginning he tells his mom that no one wants to buy his old toys.

Does he know that Woody is valuable? Was he lying to his mom to keep her from selling his toys? This is an entire fascinating subplot that I wish had been explored. Whose Instant Message accounts were those dinosaur toys using?

Pixar creatives mentioned they intentionally left Bo out of the third movie because they didn't think she'd be physically up to it with her porcelain body but she does just as much physical activity in the fourth movie! It's no secret that when we met Bo again in the fourth film, she had an incredible makeover.

Obviously, with time, Pixar's graphics only get better and better but Bo's difference in appearance was more than just graphics. She ditched the skirt and started wearing pants; she had a detachable skirt that also turned into a cape, and she tossed her bonnet to the side for a chicer headband. Bo became a strong, empowering figure since we last saw her in the second film.

But there was one thing Bo couldn't change about herself she was a toy, after all that was different. Her eye shape was larger, the blue color in her eyes shifted, and she now appears to have eyeliner! If you take the time to binge-watch all four Toy Story movies, you'll notice a shift in Bo Peep's accent. In the first movie, Bo's voice is so proper and defined with a subtle Southern twist.

In Toy Story 4 , there's no Southern accent to be heard. There's a deleted scene that never made it out of the drawing-room called "Black Friday. In the scene, Bo can be heard talking to Woody in a very heavy Southern accent but it appears the accent didn't stick because it's undetectable in the fourth movie.

Sadly, we can't ask toys if they're ambidextrous but we are questioning Bo's strong hand. In the first two Toy Story movies, Bo is typically seen carrying her crook with her right hand.

In most promotional pictures, she's holding her crook in her right hand with her three sheep by her side. But in Toy Story 4 , Bo has the crook in her left hand throughout the movie. Is this because she injured her right arm and had to rely on her left arm more? Bo's strong personality resonated with many of the movie's' female audiences but there were a few fans on Reddit who couldn't get used to the new Bo. But then somehow you find yourself, after all those years After an unexpected reunion at a playground with Bo Peep, who has been a lost, nomadic toy for years at this point, Woody begins to learn that what he has feared for so long is not what he thought it would be.

He learns from Bo that being an independent, ownerless toy does not mean he would be unloved or without purpose. This reaches a culmination when he encounters Gabby Gabby, a pull-string doll who, not unlike Woody, has been gathering dust on an antique store shelf waiting for the day to be played with by the one child she loves, a girl named Harmony.

Like Woody, she places the value of herself as a toy on if she is good enough to be played with by a child. When Harmony finally encounters Gabby for the first time, she dismisses her immediately, and Gabby loses all hope and sense of self-worth. Woody then offers to take her to Bonnie as a chance to be loved by another kid, but on the way to her, Gabby sees a lost child at the carnival and knows that that is where she wants and where is needed most.

By exploring and resolving fears Woody had since the first film, Toy Story 4 served as a more fitting conclusion to the story of his character than Toy Story 3. She enjoys being a lost toy on her own, and offers an opportunity for growth and change. It would be unbelievable for her to be going through the same intense physical things the other toys went through without getting broken. Given our previous challenges, we made the decision to have Bo Peep be that toy; it killed two birds with one stone.

And then the prologue changed: Rather than visualize the toys concocting their own play scenarios without Andy, it became a fantasy Western.

There was unfinished business there, and the team wanted to explore that. And we needed to touch on that.



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