Parents' Guide to

Toy Story 3

By Sandie Angulo Chen, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 6+

Smart, funny "threequel" is scarier than the first two.

Movie G 2010 103 minutes
Toy Story 3 Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 6+

Based on 305 parent reviews

age 10+

scarred me for life

I watched this movie when I was maybe 8 or 9. At the time, I had a very vivid imagination and played with my 100+ beloved stuffed animals often. The concept of Andy giving away his toys left me worried that one day I would have to choose which toys to place in a trash bag and give to someone else who wouldn’t love them like I did. I found the middle to end of the movie downright heartbreaking and terrifying. I still have a fear of trash because of the scene with the incinerator. I hated how the villains of the story weren’t given a chance for redemption. I am 15 now, and I still refuse to watch this movie again. If your child is still in an age where stuffed animals seem real, please do not let them watch this movie.
age 10+

Left my 7 1/2 year old son in tears

This is dark movie with violence, lying, betrayal, and a sad transition at the end. For kids who see a lot of movies and videos, this movie may be fine at age 6, but my son does not watch many movies. I wish I had pre-viewed this or read more of the parent reviews. Parents provided a more accurate portrayal of the movie. Unfortunately, I went by the age range recommended by Common Sense Media and mistakenly assumed it would be fine.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (305 ):
Kids say (368 ):

If only every "children's movie" could be this well-made and well-loved. The consistency of the voice cast (even Andy is played by the same actor, now in his 20s), the brilliant animation, and the many running jokes are just a few of the reasons this series has yet to go stale. And the clever new gags -- like when Buzz gets "reset" and ends up in Spanish mode, making poetic declarations of love to his señorita, Jessie -- offer some of the movie's highlights. The film's antagonists, led by Beatty's deceptively huggable Lotso, have a believable reason for acting so selfishly, and Keaton's Ken is hilariously clothes-obsessed (and sensitive about being called a "girl's toy"). In the end, every character gets to shine (Barbie, the aliens, a self-sacrificing Mr. Potato Head who gets very creative when the situation calls for it), and every toy gets the "happily ever after" they deserve.

Disney's Pixar is possibly the only studio in the history of Hollywood to bat a thousand. Even though some of their films end up having more adult appeal (Ratatouille and WALL-E probably don't get as much DVD rotation as Finding Nemo or Monsters Inc. in many kids' houses) than others, Pixar's films always surpass expectations. So it's absolutely no surprise that the third installment in the studio's Toy Story franchise is another winner. By now we love these toys, cheering them on through battles with Sid the sadistic tween neighbor, greedy Big Al, and selfish Stinky Pete. So when Andy tosses the toys in a trash bag, our hearts flutter -- and when that bag winds up in the donation box instead of a trash compactor, we sigh in relief. And when at one point it seems that our beloved heroes may have truly reached the end, we tense up -- or in the case of the preschoolers in the audience, shed a tear or two. (And if that moment doesn't get you, the scene in which Andy's mom looks around his empty room and bids him farewell certainly will.)

Movie Details

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