As Barbie notes during her tour, they didn't make enough of him the first time out, so they made a new, larger run, which includes an anti-gravity belt.
#Toy story 2 barbie movie#
There was a heavy Demand Overload invoked for Buzz Lightyear toys after the original movie came out and became an unexpected smash-hit, which this scene is hanging a lampshade on. The explanation for the "Buzz Lightyear Aisle" that Barbie gives is completely real.Al lives in an apartment block that doesn't allow children, which is Truth in Television 18+ only apartments do exist for various reasons, and became more common in the 2010s.He ends up going to Japan with a load of empty cases and he's clearly a destroyed man when we see him at the end. Al steals Woody for the final piece in the Woody's Roundup collection so he can take them all to the Konishi Toy Museum in Tokyo, but it turns out to be this trope in the end as Woody decides to go back to Andy and takes Jessie and Bullseye with him.However, Woody has a change of heart and decides to go back after all, but now deciding to take the Roundup Gang with him because he knows that without him, they'll go back to storage, possibly indefinitely. It seems that Andy's toys' quest to rescue Woody is in vain when Woody chooses to go to the museum instead of going back to Andy, because he fears being outgrown and thrown out, causing Andy's toys to leave without him. He's very excitable and jumps/licks on everyone he likes. All Animals Are Dogs: Bullseye is basically a giant puppy dog.Affirmative Action Girl: Jessie is introduced in this movie, adding another female to the main cast besides the very feminine Bo Peep.
In 2009, it was re-released alongside Toy Story as a double feature in stereoscopic Disney Digital 3-D, with the two films completely re-rendered to match the level of detail of Toy Story 3 (the UK had to wait until January 2010 for Toy Story 2 to come out in 3D). Notable for being Pixar's first sequel, and for spawning a spinoff television series, Buzz Lightyear of Star Command.
Woody discovers that they're all going to be sold to a toy museum in Japan, and he has to decide whether to go back to Andy - who will eventually outgrow him - or go to the museum and last forever, but never be loved. Meanwhile Woody finds out he's a piece of merchandise from an old kids' show called Woody's Roundup after meeting three other tie-in dolls based on his sidekicks on the show, and that he himself is a valuable collector's item. Woody is accidentally damaged during one of Andy's play times, which causes him no end of concern about becoming an unwanted "broken toy." Later, Woody gets stolen at a yard sale by greedy toy collector Al, so Buzz leads a group of Andy's toys to go rescue him.
Toy Story 2 is the 1999 sequel to the first film, which takes place a year or two later.