Brand new factory sealed vhs tape with Disney watermark on the bottom edge. Special edition comes in a collectible oversized clamshell. Full screen version is perfect for old school TVs as the image will fill your square frame. Newer widescreen owners will love the uncompressed audio. And everybody will enjoy the menu free retro pop-n-go video.
Just as 'T-2' & 'Jurassic Park' revolutionized the use of digital effects in live-action films, this wondorous eye-popping Pixar production--the first fully computer-animated feature, which earned a special Oscar for its director--opened the floodgates for 3-D like animation.
A group of toys belonging to a boy name Andy spring to life whenever he leaves his room. On the day of his birthday party, the toys' nominal leader--a pull-stringed talking cowboy doll named Woody (Tom Hanks)--finds his favored status usurped by the arrival of a new space ranger toy called Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen).
Already threatened by Buzz's spaceship and array of gadgets, Woody is also livid about the toys insistence that he really IS a space ranger, and that Andy's bedroom is an alien planet where he has crash-landed. Woody's desperate attempts to get rid of his none-too-swift rival causes him to be shunned by his fellows, but a more serious concern for everyone looms in the form of Sid, the toy-torturing kid next door, who likes to graft doll heads and limbs onto mismatching torsos.
There are any number of elements to delight children, but the screenwriters have also gone out of their way to keep the narrative of interest to all ages. The voice casting is equally clever, while Hanks and Allen are both terrific, how can you not also love the choice of Don Rickles for Mr. Potatohead (getting the chance to take his trademark "hockey puck" snub to its obvious, literal end) or 'Full Metal Jacket's' R. Lee Ermey as the commander of a Bucket O' Soldiers?