John Lasseter, the founding and guiding light of Pixar movies, graduated from Oscar-winning shorts to this blockbuster feature about a child’s bedroom full of toys with minds of their own. For the lead roles Lasseter picked two stars: from movies, Hanks as the cloth cowboy Woody, and from TV, Tim Allen as the more modern Buzz Lightyear. The expert exasperation Hanks put into his 90s roles (“There’s no crying in baseball!”) well suited him for Woody, especially when he must provide tough-love psychotherapy to Buzz, who thinks he’s an actual space hero. “You — are — a — toy!” Woody tells him, as a stern parent would a backward child. “You aren’t the real Buzz Lightyear! You are an action figure! You are a child’s play-thing!” We daren’t tell Woody that he too is deluded: some writer of a fantasy series invented Buzz. Actually, Lasseter did.
The Voices of Pixar
Pixar's Toy Story 3 hits theaters June 18, the latest project from the studio to arrive stocked with unusual vocal talent. TIME surveys Pixar's 11 feature films, and the peculiar voices that have helped these unforgettable stories take flight
Tom Hanks, Toy Story (1995)
Full List
Mastering the Art of Vocals
- Tom Hanks, Toy Story (1995)
- John Ratzenberger, A Bug’s Life (1998)
- Tim Allen, Toy Story II (1999)
- Mary Gibbs, Monsters, Inc. (2001)
- Ellen DeGeneres, Finding Nemo (2003)
- Brad Bird, The Incredibles (2004)
- Paul Newman, Cars (2006)
- Patton Oswalt, Ratatouille (2007)
- Ben Burtt, WALL-E (2008)
- Bob Peterson, Up (2009)
- Timothy Dalton, Toy Story 3 (2010)