Super Mario Bros. Wonder 2-Player - Full Game Walkthrough

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 16 พ.ย. 2023
  • A 2-player full game walkthrough for Super Mario Bros. Wonder on Nintendo Switch played with Mario and Luigi. I was playing as Mario and my friend was using Luigi throughout this entire walkthrough. Did you enjoy the Super Mario Bros. Movie and looking for Mario content? I've got it tons of videos from all of your favorite Mario games. Please check out my playlists to find them all. This is an instructional video showing how to complete the game from start to finish, including all main bosses in the game.
    This channel features transformative & instructional video game guides, walkthroughs, speedruns & many other unique video creations. My own personal creative input, gameplay and editing are clearly added into each video to ensure that all videos adhere to TH-cam's partner program guidelines. All gameplay is my own & is recorded and edited solely by me. Permission to upload each game was provided by the game publisher.
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ความคิดเห็น • 44

  • @marcuscheng2507
    @marcuscheng2507 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    One of my favorite games ever on the Nintendo Switch!

  • @SuperMarioTroy
    @SuperMarioTroy 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I love playing this game on the switch. This game is so much fun!!😁😁

  • @alfredovillanuevajr.
    @alfredovillanuevajr. 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Thank you for creating a video of a complete walkthrough of the entire game! :-) I got this game as a gift and I'm so happy to have the game. I can't wait to complete it all.

  • @CrowTRobotMST3K
    @CrowTRobotMST3K 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Honestly, Daisy is probably my favorite character. She has great voice lines and animations for her debut as a playable character!

    • @trix48751
      @trix48751 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      When you say debut as a playable character, you mean her playable debut in a “Super Mario” game.

  • @galdinobautista3576
    @galdinobautista3576 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Pack, please make a 3-Player Walk-through of Super Mario Bros Wonder

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Many fossils are just fragments of an organism - teeth, pieces of a jawbone, or bits of leaf.
    "An epic of miniature proportions."
    -Tagline[3]
    A Bug's Life is Pixar's second feature film, after Toy Story. It was produced by Pixar Animation Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Pictures. It was released in theaters on November 20, 1998. Dave Foley, Kevin Spacey, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Hayden Panettiere, Phyllis Diller, Richard Kind, David Hyde Pierce, Joe Ranft, Denis Leary, Jonathan Harris, Madeline Kahn, Bonnie Hunt, Michael McShane, John Ratzenberger, Brad Garrett, Roddy McDowall, Edie McClurg, Alex Rocco, and David Ossman fill out the film's ensemble voice cast.
    The plot of A Bug's Life focuses on an outcast ant named Flik who recruits a group of circus bugs to help him rid his colony of evil grasshoppers.
    Ant Island is the home of a colony of desperate and peaceful ants, ruled by the wise queen and her oldest daughter, Princess Atta, who is very timid and nervous of her responsibilities. The grasshoppers arrive once a season to extort food from the ants, supposedly in return for protection from bigger bugs. However, while working with an invention to pick grain more efficiently, a young optimistic ant named Flik accidentally destroys the annual offering that the ants were collecting to appease the grasshoppers. In exchange for a temporary reprieve from the grasshoppers, the ants are given until the end of autumn to produce an offering of twice the usual amount. Later, while he is being admonished by Atta and the royal council of the colony, Flik proposes a plan to recruit warrior bugs to fight off the grasshoppers, much to the Queen's amusement. When Atta and the council agrees to his proposal, Flik actually believes they have accepted the merits of his plan, whereas the council actually saw it as a convenient way of simply keeping Flik from wreaking any more havoc with their food-gathering activities.
    Flik finds his way to the Bug City garbage under a trailer, where he finds a group of recently fired circus performers, whose act had collapsed into chaos, and mistakes them for the warrior bugs he's seeking. The bug troupe, meanwhile, mistakes Flik for a talent agent who wants to book their act and agrees to travel with him back to Ant Island.
    Both Flik and the circus troupe soon become aware of their respective mistakes. However, the rest of the ant colony and the queen had become convinced that these newcomers are indeed the warriors for which they had hoped when the Circus Bugs help Flik pull off a daring rescue of Dot, Atta's younger sister of the colony, who idolizes Flik and a wounded Francis, a ladybug performer of the Circus Bug troupe from a predatory bird. Flik was also able to gain Princess Atta's respect and apology to him in the process.
    Caught between the opportunity to turn around his fortunes within the colony, and the knowledge that the bug troupe are not who they appear to be, Flik advocates building a fake bird to scare away Hopper, the leader of the grasshoppers, who is deeply afraid of birds. The ants unite behind Flik's plan until the circus ringmaster, P.T. Flea, arrives to retrieve his performers, thereby blowing Flik's cover. As punishment for deceiving the colony, Atta foolishly banishes Flik, who sadly joins the rest of the circus.
    Meanwhile, at the grasshopper's home under a sombrero in a desert, Molt, Hopper's brother is tricked by other grasshoppers into trying to talk Hopper out of returning to Ant Island since they have more than enough food to last, and it will rain soon. Hopper in response shows his henchmen exactly why they are returning by burying the three who questioned him with hundreds of seeds. Saying that the ants and seeds are alike, ants may be puny by themselves, but they outnumber grasshoppers 100 to 1. They aren't returning because of food; they're returning to keep the ants from figuring out how powerful they really are.
    Having wasted an enormous amount of time pursuing Flik's plan to stand up to the grasshoppers, the ants try desperately to gather enough food for a new offering, but due to the rapidly approaching winter season, they can't find enough food to meet the quota. When the grasshoppers return and are angered by the meager offering, Dot overhears Hopper's plan to squish the queen after receiving the full offering and convinces her friends to put Flik's bird plan back into action. With her wings finally grown in, she goes after Flik and convinces him and the Circus Bugs to return to save the colony from Hopper's tyranny.
    With the Circus Bugs' deception and the bird springing to action, the plan nearly works, but when a confused P.T. inadvertently incinerates the bird, Hopper realizes he has been tricked and takes out his anger on the ants, but more onto his primary instigator, Flik. After absorbing a beating from Hopper's rabid, feral grasshopper Thumper and to Hopper's declaration of ants living under salvery to grasshoppers, Flik declares, in response to Hopper's claims of species superiority:
    "You're wrong, Hopper. Ants are not meant to serve grasshoppers. I've seen these ants do great things, and year after year they somehow manage to pick enough food for themselves and you. So, who's the weaker species? Ants don't need grasshoppers! It's you who need us! We're a lot stronger than you say we are...and you know it, don't you?"
    Indeed, Hopper's angered and worried expression leads Flik to realize that Hopper has always known how strong the ants are. However, Hopper's reaction to Flik's challenge in front of the whole ant colony, along with Princess Atta make them collectively realize that they vastly outnumber the grasshoppers, and that they needn't endure their oppression any longer. As Hopper tries to squish Flik, Atta defends him and revolts against Hopper.
    The ants and the Circus Bugs rise up in a wave of fury and chase the grasshoppers, (excluding Molt) out for good, with Dot and Dim finally standing up to Thumper, but not before Hopper abducts Flik in a plan to exact revenge upon him. Flik's friends set off in pursuit of them, with Princess Atta in full admiration of Flik, rescuing him and thanks to some quick thinking by Flik, they lure Hopper to becoming devoured by a real bird and her chicks. Flik is welcomed back to the colony, and all the Circus Bugs join him in a celebration before departing from Ant Island.

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    They can also be as tiny as bacteria, developing embryos, or pollen grains.
    When the ants decide whether on not let Flik go to Ant City, Atta says, "He can't mess anything up.". However, her lip movement reads "screw" when she says "mess".
    When Gypsy spreads her wings throughout the film, the number of yellow spots on her wings keep changing.
    The size of the shadow of an object depends upon its distance from the light source, not the surface that falls upon. Lifting the cutout of the bird a few inches closer to the Sun as they do would make absolutely no difference to the size of its shadow, yet it quadruples in size.
    When Tuck & Roll got Hopper's antenna, the other antenna was the only one on Hopper's head, but when zoomed out, the antenna that was pulled off is still there.
    Approximately half of the insects in the film appear to have 4 limbs, while the other half have the correct number of 6.
    When P.T. Flea was doing his trick with the other performers, he was stuck on a paper with glue. When he is putting his head on front, his other hair was found on the huge paper. But when the paper falls to the matches to make him filled with ash, his hairs that got stuck to the paper are gone.
    The bird featured in the film is clearly a songbird, but her chicks seen at the end of the film that hatch just in time to eat Hopper alive are all depicted with their downy feathers and open eyes. Actual songbirds are born naked and blind.
    Gypsy resembles a regular moth. But in real life, only male gypsy moths have fully functional wings while females have vestigial wings and can't fly unlike all the other moth species (a similar trait goes to bagworm moths, where only males have wings and females have no wings at all).
    When Atta and the Queen were discussing relaxing, the Queen puts Aphie down. When he was down, the two male ants made a hole to escape from Dot. But when a tall wheat stalk falls on Princess Atta, the hole disappears.
    "The Time of Your Life" - Randy Newman
    "A Place You've Never Been" - The Manhattan Transfer (Read-along only)
    16 A Bug's Life on Pixar Wiki
    WikipediaListLink A Bug's Life at Wikipedia
    Disney A Bug's Life on Disney.com
    Just do this?!

  • @user-pq4kz4lv3h
    @user-pq4kz4lv3h 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Wonderful Packattack, wonderful! Hey there! I'm Ezeckiel and I love Super Mario Bros. Wonder!

  • @jasonguay2602
    @jasonguay2602 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This game is awesome 😎

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    They tell of life-and-death struggles and of mysterious worlds lost in the mists of time.
    Overnight, Woody tries to get Buzz to help him escape; however, Buzz is still depressed that he's only a toy. Woody tries to convince him that being a toy is much better than being a Space Ranger, and Andy still thinks he's the best thing in the world. Buzz doesn't know why Andy would want him, and Woody explains while coming to terms with his own feelings of resentment:
    Why would Andy want you?! Look at you! You're a Buzz Lightyear. Any other toy would give up his moving parts just to be you. You've got wings, you glow in the dark, you talk, your helmet does that... that whoosh thing. You are a COOL toy... as a matter of fact, you're too cool. I mean -- I mean, what chance does a toy like me have against a Buzz Lightyear action figure?
    As Woody sadly states that he should be the one taped to the rocket (thinking Andy won't love him anymore), Buzz looks at his boot where Andy has signed his name, realizing how much Andy loves him and how being a toy isn't too bad. They try to escape (although Buzz accidentally knocks the toolbox on Woody when trying to get him out of the milk crate). Unfortunately, Sid wakes up and takes Buzz out to blow him up, leaving Woody alone in the room. Even worse, Andy and his family are getting ready to move, with Andy depressed over having seemingly lost Woody and Buzz having only been able to find Buzz's cardboard spaceship and his cowboy hat. Woody calls out to the Mutant Toys to tell them a plan to stop Sid. After a daring escape through the house and past Scud, Woody and the mutants end up in the yard with Sid. They decide to break the rules and allow him to see that they can move on their own. Woody even speaks to him through his voice box, telling him that his toys are sick of being tortured and tells Sid that he must take good care of his toys, because if he doesn't, they'll find out, then with his own voice tells him (in a sinister way) to play nice. This freaks him out and he runs into the house screaming, where Hannah frightens him with her new doll, Sally (a possible replacement for her original doll, Janie, which was destroyed by him and unaware she was fixed).
    Finally free from Sid, Woody and Buzz try to catch the moving van just as it pulls away from the house. After saying farewell to the Mutant Toys, a harrowing chase follows, with Scud chasing them and Andy's toys not helping since they still think that Woody intentionally got rid of Buzz. Luckily, Woody and Buzz get rid of Scud and the other toys, realizing their mistake, finally see that Woody was telling the truth and try to help them get in, but fail when RC's batteries run out (becoming depleted). Eventually, with the help of RC, Andy's remote control car, strategic use of the rocket, and use of Buzz's plastic wings, Woody and Buzz return to Andy, whose mom assumes they were in the car all along.
    At Christmas, which takes place a few months after the toys reconcile with Woody, we see a scene similar to the birthday party, with the toys less worried about the new ones. Mr. Potato Head is amazed to find out that Molly has been given a Mrs. Potato Head. When discussing being replaced by a new toy (like Woody though will be replaced by Buzz), Woody poses the question to Buzz, "What could Andy possibly get that is worse than you?" The answer comes in the form of Andy's first present, a puppy (which makes Woody and Buzz feel quite uneasy with the new addition).
    Tom Hanks as Woody
    Tim Allen as Buzz Lightyear
    Don Rickles as Mr. Potato Head
    Jim Varney as Slinky Dog
    Wallace Shawn as Rex
    John Ratzenberger as Hamm
    Annie Potts as Bo Peep
    John Morris as Andy Davis
    Hannah Unkrich as Molly Davis
    Erik von Detten as Sid Phillips
    R. Lee Ermey as Sarge
    Laurie Metcalf as Andy's Mom
    Sarah Freeman as Hannah Phillips
    Penn Jillette as TV Announcer
    Jack Angel - Rocky, Shark
    Spencer Aste
    Greg Berg
    Lisa Bradley - Human Children
    Kendall Cunningham - Human Children
    Debi Derryberry
    Cody Dorkin - Human Children
    Bill Farmer
    Craig Good
    Gregory Grudt - Human Children
    Danielle Judovits
    Sam Lasseter
    Brittany Levenbrown
    Sherry Lynn
    Scott McAfee - Human Children
    Mickie McGowan
    Ryan O'Donohue - Human Children
    Jeff Pidgeon - Aliens
    Patrick Pinney
    Phil Proctor
    Jan Rabson
    Joe Ranft - Lenny
    Andrew Stanton
    Shane Sweet - Human Children
    Nathan Lane - Timon
    John Lasseter - Alien/Commercial Chorus[
    citation needed
    ]
    Ernie Sabella - Pumbaa
    John Lasseter's first experience with computer animation was during his work as an animator at Disney when two of his friends showed him the light cycle scene from TRON. It was an eye-opening experience which awakened Lasseter to the possibilities offered by the new medium of computer-generated animation. Lasseter went on to work at Lucasfilm and later as a founding member of Pixar.
    Pixar's Oscar-winning short film Tin Toy and its CAPS project were among works that gained Disney's attention and, after meetings in 1990 with Jeffrey Katzenberg, Pixar pitched a television special called A Tin Toy Christmas. By July 1991, Disney and Pixar signed an agreement to work on a film, based on the Tin Toy characters, called Toy Story. The deal gave Pixar a three-film deal (with Toy Story being the first) as well as 10% of the films' profits.
    Toy Story's script was strongly influenced by the ideas of screenwriter Robert McKee. The script went through many changes before the final version. Lasseter decided Tinny was "too antiquated", and the character was changed to a military action figure, and then given a space theme. Tinny's name changed to Lunar Larry, then Tempus from Morph, and eventually Buzz Lightyear (after astronaut Buzz Aldrin). Lightyear's design was modeled on the suits worn by Apollo astronauts as well as G.I. Joe action figures along with the green and purple color scheme. A second character, originally a ventriloquist's dummy, was changed to a stuffed cowboy doll with a pull-string and named Woody for Western actor Woody Strode. The difference between the old and new toy led to a conflict between their personalities. Lasseter wanted the film to not be a musical, but a buddy film, with the story department drawing inspiration from films such as 48 Hrs. and The Defiant Ones. Joss Whedon claimed "It would have been a really bad musical because it's a buddy movie. It's about people who won't admit what they want, much less sing about it. ... Buddy movies are about sublimating, punching an arm, 'I hate you.' It's not about open emotion." Disney also appointed Joel Cohen, Alec Sokolow and, later, Whedon to help develop the script. In addition, Disney wanted the film to appeal to both children and adults and asked for adult references to be added to the film. Disney gave approval for the film on January 19, 1993, at which point voice casting could begin. In addition, Katzenberg also made repeated demands that they make the film more adult, cynical, and edgy, resulting in Woody being made into a sarcastic jerk with little redeeming value. Rejected titles for Toy Story included: The New Toy, The Cowboy & the Spaceman, The Favorite, and Toyz in the Hood.
    Lasseter always wanted Tom Hanks to play the character of Woody. Lasseter claimed Hanks "... has the ability to take emotions and make them appealing. Even if the character, like the one in A League of Their Own, is down-and-out and despicable." Early test footage, using Hanks' voice from Turner & Hooch, convinced Hanks to sign on to the film. Paul Newman also auditioned for the role of Woody, but turned down the role, although he would voice Doc Hudson in Pixar's later success, Cars. In addition to Newman, John Cusack, Steve Martin, and John Travolta also auditioned for the role of Woody. Billy Crystal was approached to play Buzz, but turned down the role, which he later regretted, although he would voice Mike Wazowski in Pixar's later success, Monsters, Inc. In addition to Crystal, Bill Murray, Chevy Chase, Gene Wilder, and Jim Carrey auditioned for the role of Buzz. Katzenberg took the role to Tim Allen, who was appearing in Disney's Home Improvement, and he accepted. Toy Story was both Hanks and Allen's first animated film role.
    Pixar presented an early draft of the film to Disney on November 19, 1993. The result was disastrous: Walt Disney Feature Animation president Peter Schneider immediately shut down production pending a new script approved by Disney. Pixar survived the shutdown by falling back on its existing television commercial business while the script was rewritten. The new script made Woody a more likable character, instead of the "sarcastic jerk" he had been. Katzenberg restarted production in February 1994. The voice actors returned in March to record their new lines.
    It was Whedon's idea to incorporate Barbie as a character who would rescue Woody and Buzz in the film's final act. The idea was dropped after Mattel objected and refused to license the toy. Producer Ralph Guggenheim claimed that Mattel did not allow the use of the toy as "They [Mattel] philosophically felt girls who play with Barbie dolls are projecting their personalities onto the doll. If you give the doll a voice and animate it, you're creating a persona for it that might not be every little girl's dream and desire." Barbies did, however, appear in the film's sequel, Toy Story 2. Hasbro likewise refused to license G.I. Joe but did license Mr. Potato Head. The film's related toys were produced by Thinkway Toys, who secured the worldwide master toy license in 1995.

  • @juanmiguel7709
    @juanmiguel7709 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    This game is probably one the most cursed ones Nintendo has released but it definitively is a great game

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    For every organism preserved as a fossil, many died without leaving a trace, so the fossil record is not complete.
    The following Spring, the colony adopts Flik's harvester to speed up grain collection. Atta becomes the new queen, passes the princess crown to Dot, and chooses Flik as her mate. As the troupe leaves, Slim notices that they've forgotten Heimlich, who emerges from the chrysalis in which he has encased himself. He pops out with a tiny pair of butterfly wings, far too small to lift him off the ground, but he's picked up by Francis and Manny. The Circus Bugs (with Molt acting as a road crew assistant) departs with the colony's thanks. Dot, joined by Queen Atta and Flik (who are shown holding hands), waves goodbye. The shot then pulls out, and "The End" appears on the screen.
    Dave Foley as Flik
    Kevin Spacey as Hopper
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Atta
    Hayden Panettiere as Dot
    Phyllis Diller as The Queen
    Richard Kind as Molt
    John Ratzenberger as P.T. Flea
    David Hyde Pierce as Slim
    Denis Leary as Francis
    Joe Ranft as Heimlich
    Jonathan Harris as Manny
    Madeline Kahn as Gypsy
    Bonnie Hunt as Rosie
    Michael McShane as Tuck and Roll
    Brad Garrett as Dim
    Roddy McDowall as Mr. Soil
    Edie McClurg as Dr. Flora
    Alex Rocco as Thorny
    David Ossman as Cornelius
    Carlos Alazraqui - Loco
    Jack Angel - Thud
    Bob Bergen - Aphie, Male Ants
    Kimberly J. Brown - Female Ants
    Rodger Bumpass - Mosquito
    Anthony Burch - Ant Boys
    Bill Farmer - Ant #3
    Brad Hill - Grasshopper
    Jess Harnell - Bus Beetle, Snail
    Paul Eiding - Male Ants
    Jessica Evans - Female Ants
    Jeff Pidgeon - Bee, Grasshopper
    Sherry Lynn - Female Ants
    Jan Rabson - Axel
    Russi Taylor - Female Ants
    John Lasseter - Harry the Fly
    Jennifer Darling - Female Ants, Fly Mom
    Rachel Davey
    Debi Derryberry - Baby Maggots
    Sam Gifaldi - Ant Boy #2
    Brendan Hickey - Ants
    Kate Hodges - Female Ants
    Denise Johnson - Bug
    David Lander - Thumper
    Mickie McGowan - Cockroach Waitress, Mosquito Waitress
    Courtland Mead - Ant Boy #1
    Christine Milian - Female Ants
    Kelsey Mulrooney - Female Ants
    Ryan O'Donohue - Ant Boys, Grub
    Phil Proctor - Fly in Circus, Grasshopper Lye Down
    Joe Ranft - Complaining Fly
    Jordan Ranft - Dot's Friend
    Brian M. Rosen - Fly Brothers, Slick, Drinking Fly
    Rebecca Schneider - Female Ants
    Francesca Marie Smith - Female Ants
    Andrew Stanton - Bug Zapper Bug
    Hannah Swanson - Female Ants
    Travis Tedford - Ant Kids
    Ashley Tisdale - Blueberry Ant, Daisy, Lead Blueberry Scout
    Lee Unkrich - Ant #1
    Jordan Warkol - Ant #2
    The plotline has several similarities to the DreamWorks' produced Antz, which had been released a month earlier. This was because of Jeffrey Katzenberg forming DreamWorks and previously being kicked out of Disney for feuding in the company around the time A Bug's Life was in development. As a result, DreamWorks started releasing films, which were not only released sometime after a Disney film, but also had similar concepts and settings. Since then, Disney and DreamWorks have remained rivals.
    The film was widely acclaimed from both critics and audiences and, was a box office success, grossing $363 million worldwide against its $120 million budget.
    Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 92% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 85 reviews, with an average score of 7.9/10. The critical consensus is "Blending top notch animation with rousing adventure, witty dialogue, and memorable characters, A Bug's Life is another Pixar winner." Another review aggregator, Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 top reviews from mainstream critics, calculated a score of 77 based on 23 reviews, indicating "Generally favorable reviews."
    Todd McCarthy of Variety gave the film a positive review, saying "Lasseter and Pixar broke new technical and aesthetic ground in the animation field with Toy Story, and here they surpass it in both scope and complexity of movement while telling a story that overlaps Antz in numerous ways." James Berardinelli of ReelViews gave the film three and a half stars out of four, saying "A Bug's Life, like Toy Story, develops protagonists we can root for, and places them in the midst of a fast-moving, energetic adventure." Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three and a half stars out of four, saying "Will A Bug's Life suffer by coming out so soon after Antz? Not any more than one thriller hurts the chances for the next one. Antz may even help business for A Bug's Life by demonstrating how many dramatic and comedic possibilities can be found in an anthill." Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times gave the film four out of five stars, saying "What A Bug's Life demonstrates is that when it comes to bugs, the most fun ones to hang out with hang exclusively with the gang at Pixar." Peter Stack of the San Francisco Chronicle gave the film four out of four stars, saying "A Bug's Life is one of the great movies - a triumph of storytelling and character development, and a whole new ballgame for computer animation. Pixar Animation Studios has raised the genre to an astonishing new level". Since then, DreamWorks and Pixar have been bitter enemies.

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Taken together, the fossils of ancient organisms make up the history of life on Earth called the fossil record.
    Main article: Toy Story (soundtrack)
    Lasseter was against making the film a musical, similar to prior Disney films such as Aladdin and The Lion King. However, Disney favored the musical format, claiming "Musicals are our orientation. Characters breaking into song is a great shorthand. It takes some of the onus off what they're asking for." However, Disney later agreed with Lasseter and decided to select Randy Newman to score the film, which would be Newman's first animated film. Lasseter claimed, "His songs are touching, witty, and satirical, and he would deliver the emotional underpinning for every scene." Newman developed the film's signature song "You've Got a Friend in Me" in one day.
    The soundtrack for Toy Story was produced by Walt Disney Records and was released on November 22, 1995, the week of the film's release.
    The soundtrack got nominated for two Oscars for Best Original Score and Best Original Song for You've Got a Friend in Me losing both of them to Pocahontas (film).
    Toy Story premiered on November 19, 1995, in Hollywood, California. For its theater run, it was released on November 22, 1995, at the beginning of a 5-day Thanksgiving weekend. The film opened in 2,281 theaters (before later expanding to 2,574 theaters). The film remained in theaters for 37 weeks. At the box office the film earned $361 million dollars worldwide. It became the highest grossing film of 1995 beating Batman Forever, Apollo 13, Pocahontas, Casper, Waterworld, Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie, GoldenEye, and Jumanji. It also became the third highest grossing animated film after The Lion King (1994) and Aladdin (1992).
    Main article: Toy Story (video)
    Toy Story was released on VHS and Laserdisc on October 29, 1996, with no bonus material. In the first week of release, VHS rentals totaled $5.1 million, debuting Toy Story as the number one video for the week. Over 21.5 million VHS copies were sold in the first year. A Laserdisc re-release as a deluxe edition was released on December 18, 1996. On January 11, 2000, it was re-released on VHS in the Gold Classic Collection series with the bonus short, Tin Toy, which sold two million copies. Its first DVD release was on October 17, 2000, in a two-pack with Toy Story 2. This release was later available individually. Also on October 17, 2000, a 3-disc "Ultimate Toy Box" set was released, featuring Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and a third disc of bonus materials. On September 6, 2005, a 2-disc Set was released featuring much of the bonus material from the "Ultimate Toy Box", including a retrospective special with John Lasseter, a home theater mix, as well as a new picture. This DVD went back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2009, along with Toy Story 2. Also on September 6, 2005, a bare-bones UMD of Toy Story was released for the Sony PlayStation Portable.
    The film was available on Blu-ray for the first time in a Special Edition Combo Pack that was released on March 23, 2010, along with its sequel. There was a DVD-only re-release on May 11, 2010.
    This is the first Pixar film to be directed by John Lasseter.
    It seems the "comatose" state the toys enter when being observed by people is instinctive as Buzz (despite his delusion) always freezes up when Andy plays with him.
    It is the only Toy Story film to lack villainous toys, although the Mutant toys and Mr. Potato Head are depicted in an antagonistic manner initially.
    This is the only Pixar movie to have only the Walt Disney Pictures logo at the beginning, the Pixar logo first and then the Walt Disney Pictures logo at the ending, though when it was re-released in 2009 in 3D (along side with it's sequel), the Pixar logo appears along with the Pixar-exclusive Walt Disney Pictures logo being replaced with the 2006 Walt Disney Pictures logo.
    With a runtime of 81 minutes, it is Pixar's shortest animated feature.
    This is also the only Pixar movie to have full opening credits.
    This is also the first Pixar movie to use the Pixar variant of the 1990 Walt Disney Pictures logo, which would last all the way to Ratatouille and the first Pixar movie to use the 1995 Pixar logo.
    This is the first Pixar film to be released with a short film not made by Pixar, but instead with a re-release of the Roger Rabbit short film, Roller Coaster Rabbit, even though in various home video releases (starting with the 2000 re-release), it was accompanied by the 1988 Pixar short, Tin Toy, the second being Coco which was accompanied by Olaf's Frozen Adventure, and the third being Onward, which was accompanied by The Simpsons short film Playdate with Destiny.
    This is the first movie where Tom Hanks and Tim Allen do voice acting in an animated film.
    The teaser trailer premiered on the theatrical release of Pocahontas, while the final theatrical trailer, which was aimed more at adult audiences and featured the track "The Boys Are Back in Town", premiered before The Tie That Binds. The UK version of the same trailer was voiced by Disney Videos legend John Sachs on the 1996 video of Pocahontas.
    The spin-off film Lightyear confirms this film takes place in 1995 and that Andy went to see the in-universe film that year.
    The song "Hakuna Matata" sung by Timon and Pumbaa from The Lion King is being played in the car when Molly is looking through the mirror seeing Woody and Buzz Lightyear on the road with RC.
    A113 appears on Andy's mother's number plate on her car, a nod to the art classroom.
    When Woody is talking through the Microphone during the Toy Meeting, behind him are books with the titles of several Pixar Shorts, like "Tin Toy" by John Lasseter, "Knick Knack", "Red's Dream", and "The Adventures of André and Wally B.". "Grimm's Fairy Tales" is another title.
    A red Luxo, Sr., the Pixar animated lamp, sits on Andy's desk.
    The iconic Pixar ball from said short appears twice when the toy soldiers take cover.
    Neighbor Sid's toolbox is "Binford" brand; a reference to Tim Allen's television show, Home Improvement.
    While driving, Andy's mom passes a "Dinoco" gas station - a company that would later regularly appear in the Cars franchise.
    Many real life games and toys appear in the movie from but not limited to:
    Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head
    Candy Land
    PLAYSKOOL® baby monitor and tinkertoy
    UNO
    Hot Wheels and so on.
    A large version of the Mickey Mouse watch can be seen on Andy's wall.
    A shooting star can be seen behind Buzz Lightyear, that would later regularly appear in Gravity Falls on Mabel Pines.
    WikipediaListLink Toy Story at Wikipedia
    Imdb2 Toy Story on IMDb
    Toy Story at the Big Cartoon DataBase
    Official Pixar website
    Disney Toy Story on Disney.com
    16 Toy Story on Pixar Wiki
    a trash?!

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Love your content 😊😊😊😊

  • @francojavier159
    @francojavier159 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    the best
    mario i played

  • @cjscreations_2012
    @cjscreations_2012 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Mario fever is back😂🎉🎉

  • @Sonicblue8
    @Sonicblue8 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Can you give us a 2 player Princess edition?

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sometimes an organism leaves behind trace fossils - casts of footprints, burrows, tracks, or even droppings.
    Dave Foley as Flik, a courageous but clumsy inventor ant wanting to make a difference.
    Kevin Spacey as Hopper, the leader of the grasshopper gang oppressing the ants.
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Princess Atta, the heir to the throne, Flik's love interest and Dot's older sister.
    Hayden Panettiere as Dot, Atta's younger sister and Flik's friend.
    Phyllis Diller as The Queen, an elderly ant who is Atta and Dot's mother.
    Richard Kind as Molt, Hopper's cowardly and dimwitted yet well-mannered younger brother.
    David Hyde Pierce as Slim, a walking stick clown often used as a stand-in for stick-like props in the circus.
    Joe Ranft as Heimlich, a large, gluttonous, German-accented caterpillar clown in the circus who desires to be a butterfly.
    Denis Leary as Francis, a hot-tempered male ladybug clown in the circus, who is frequently mistaken for a female and becomes "den mother" to the Blueberry Scouts.
    Jonathan Harris as Manny, an elderly, English-accented praying mantis magician in the circus who is Gypsy's husband.
    Madeline Kahn as Gypsy, a moth in the circus who is Manny's wife and lovely assistant.
    Bonnie Hunt as Rosie, a black widow spider who is Dim's "tamer" in the circus.
    Michael McShane as Tuck and Roll, two twin pillbug brothers from Hungary who speak in gibberish and act as cannonballs in the circus.
    John Ratzenberger as P.T. Flea, the ringmaster of the circus troupe.
    Brad Garrett as Dim, a childlike rhinoceros beetle that plays the "ferocious beast" in the circus.
    Roddy McDowall as Mr. Soil, the ant colony's resident thespian.
    Edie McClurg as Dr. Flora, the ant colony's doctor.
    Alex Rocco as Thorny, a small, deep-voiced ant and Atta's grouchy assistant.
    David Ossman as Cornelius, a very old ant with a walking stick.
    David Lander as Thumper, Hopper's deranged "pet" grasshopper.[4]
    Ashley Tisdale as the leader of the Blueberry Scouts, a troop of ant children that Dot belongs to.[4]
    Jan Rabson as Axle[4]
    Jack Angel as Thud, a big horsefly and bodyguard to the Fly Brothers.[4]
    Andrew Stanton as Harry, a mosquito that went into the light.[4]
    John Lasseter as Harry's Friend[4]
    Debi Derryberry as the Baby Maggots[4]
    Brian M. Rosen as Slick, a slug.[4]
    Rodger Bumpass as a Bar Mosquito[4]
    Additional Voices provided by Carlos Alazraqui, Bob Bergen, Kimberly Brown, Anthony Burch, Jennifer Darling, Rachel Davey, Paul Eiding, Jessica Evans, Bill Farmer, Sam Gifaldi, Brad Hall, Jess Harnell, Brenden Hickey, Kate Hodges, Denise Johnson, Sherry Lynn, Mickie McGowan, Courtland Mead, Christine Milian, Kelsey Mulrooney, Ryan O'Donohue, Jeff Pidgeon, Phil Proctor, Jordy Ranft, Rebecca Schneider, Franchesca Smith, Hannah Swanson, Russi Taylor, Travis Tedford, Lee Unkrich, and Jordan Warkol.
    Research for A Bug's Life was done using a small camera attached to Lego wheels, known as "the bug cam". Research was done in planters in front of Pixar Animation Studios and in a median strip on a highway outside of the studio.
    A Bug's Life was a much more complex film than Toy Story because of the more complex character models, so Pixar's computers tended to run sluggishly for the animation process.
    The first shot in A Bug's Life starts from the point of view of a human and ends from the point of view of an insect, which is very complex. Because of its complexity, it was the most difficult shot in the film to produce. It was also one of the last shots produced for the film, because producing it required almost all of the production crew.
    The crowds of ants were particularly challenging, with some 400 crowd shots scattered throughout the film, with many requiring the animation of 800 characters. The technical team worked around this by instructing the animators to work with 4 or 5 groups of 8 to 10 ants. The software team wrote an "ant generator" program that would duplicate the character models and motions of the ants, and then automatically and randomly adjust the character models of each ant to change physical traits such as eye and skin color, height, and weight. The ants were then randomly scattered throughout the shot. This allowed these shots to be animated much more efficiently and for ants to look different from one another, despite the fact that the programmed motions would be nearly identical. These tools were based on existing "particle systems" that allowed autonomous dust and snow, which would eventually be perfected to allow up to 2 million dust particles on Wheezy's shelf in Toy Story 2 and 3 million hairs on Sulley in Monsters, Inc.
    DreamWorks Animation's similar film Antz was released a little more than a month before A Bug's Life. DreamWorks' Jeffrey Katzenberg left Disney in 1994 and said the idea for Antz came from a 1991 story pitch by Tim Johnson that was related to Katzenberg in October 1994. However, Disney had been working on developing an ant film since 1988. Pixar head John Lasseter pitched A Bug's Life the day Katzenberg left Disney in August 1994, and said he felt "betrayed" when he learned Antz was scheduled for release before A Bug's Life. According to Lasseter and Steve Jobs, Katzenberg offered to stop development of Antz if Disney moved the release date of A Bug's Life, which was coming out opposite DreamWorks Animation's The Prince of Egypt. Pixar refused.
    The release date of Antz was moved up from March 1999 to October 1998 in response to Disney's refusal. Even though A Bug's Life was the first to be pitched, Antz was finished and released first. A Bug's Life, however, was more profitable.
    Reviews were positive. The film got a 92% Fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, the lowest of any Pixar film, until Cars got a 74% in 2006.
    Do this?!

  • @roryselley
    @roryselley 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Looking to buy a game for me and my girlfriend to play as love Mario games and last time we played games like this was on the Wii like Galaxy world and super Mario bros etc is this worth it

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    How can fossils help us understand life's history?
    "Hang on for the comedy that goes to infinity and beyond!"
    -Tagline
    Toy Story is Pixar's first feature film which was produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures in US theaters on November 22, 1995. It was written by John Lasseter, Pete Docter, Joss Whedon, Andrew Stanton, Joel Cohen, and Alec Sokolow, and directed by Lasseter as well. Toy Story stars the voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Don Rickles, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Jim Varney, Annie Potts, R. Lee Ermey, John Morris, Laurie Metcalf, Erik von Detten, and Sarah Freeman, and is also the first full-length theatrically-released feature film to be made entirely with computer-generated imagery and the music was written by Randy Newman.
    The film was so successful that a sequel, Toy Story 2, was in theaters November 24, 1999. Eleven years later, Toy Story received a second sequel, Toy Story 3 which was released on June 18, 2010. Both sequels were hits and garnered critical acclaim similar to the first. Leading up to the premiere of Toy Story 3, as part of its promotion, Toy Story and Toy Story 2 were re-released in theaters as a double feature in 3-D on October 2, 2009. A third sequel, Toy Story 4, was released on June 21, 2019.
    In Disney's earning call on February 8, 2023, CEO Bob Iger announced that work was underway on another Toy Story film.
    Set in a world where toys come alive, the world's first computer-animated movie focuses on the toys of Andy Davis and centers on his favorite toy, a pull-string cowboy doll named Woody, worrying about being replaced by Andy's newest toy, a space ranger named Buzz Lightyear. When Woody and Buzz are suddenly trapped in the house of Andy's toy-killing neighbor Sid Phillips and his vicious dog Scud, they must work together to escape if they ever want to return to Andy's house.
    The film starts when a bright 10-year-old[4] boy named Andy Davis playing with his toys, such as a Mr. Potato Head toy, a plastic dinosaur toy named Rex, and his favorite toy Woody, a cowboy doll. He takes Woody into the living room and plays with him some more, with a short interruption talking to his mom about his birthday party later that day and the upcoming move to a new house. After playing with Woody, Andy starts helping his mother by carrying his baby sister Molly to her. While he's away, all of the toys come to life. Woody wakes up finding out that Andy's birthday party is today and then calls his fellow toys to a staff meeting. The meeting begins with Woody asking if each of the toys has picked a moving buddy just to be prepared for the move for one week. He then informs the toys that Andy's birthday party has been moved to today, causing the toys to get very anxious about whether they get replaced or not. Woody claims that it only matters that he and his fellow toys are here for Andy. Hamm interrupts the staff meeting telling the other toys that Andy's birthday guests have arrived. Out the window, they see the guests carrying Andy's birthday presents, still worried about getting replaced.
    Woody sends Sarge and his team of plastic soldiers downstairs with a baby monitor to report on the presents Andy receives. Although Andy receives games and clothes from his friends, his final present from his mom is the recently-released Buzz Lightyear action figure, and Andy is so excited he shoves Woody off the bed to make room for his newest toy before going downstairs for the rest of the party. Woody tries to shake off the fact that he was pushed aside as he and the rest of the toys greet Buzz, who shows off his many features like a laser light and wings. It turns out that Buzz doesn't know he's a toy, instead believing he's an actual Space Ranger who needs to fix his ship (which is actually the box he came in). Over the next few days, the other toys in the room prefer spending time with the newcomer making Woody feel jealous. This is intensified further when Andy begins playing with Buzz even more and replaces the cowboy decorations in his room with Buzz-themed ones.
    Sometime later, Ms. Davis takes Andy and Molly on a trip to the space-themed Pizza Planet restaurant. Andy asks if he can bring any toys, and she agrees to let him take one. Woody, knowing Andy will choose Buzz, plans to trap him in a gap behind Andy's desk by using RC so Andy won't find him and will have to take Woody instead, but the plan goes badly wrong when Woody accidentally knocks Buzz out the window. When the other toys, including Mr. Potato Head, learn of Woody's actions, most of them (except Bo and Slinky) think Woody tried to kill Buzz out of jealousy. They then try to attack him, but Woody is rescued when Andy, who is unable to find Buzz, decides to take Woody on the trip instead.
    At a stop at a Dinoco gas station to refuel the car, Woody after pondering how he's going to convince the toys that the whole thing was an accident finds that Buzz grabbed ahold of the family's minivan and is with them. After a conversation, the two toys begin to fight, knocking each other out of the minivan, and are left behind when it drives away. The two then have a heated argument underneath a tanker truck, and after briefly lashing out at the deluded space ranger, Woody convinces Buzz to hitch a lift on a Pizza Planet Truck in order to return to Andy.
    Still thinking he's a real space ranger, Buzz believes that Pizza Planet is a spaceport. He climbs into a toy crane game, thinking that it's a spaceship that will take him to Emperor Zurg's location. Woody, knowing that he can't return to Andy's room without Buzz, goes in after him, but the two are eventually found by Sid Phillips, who lives next door to Andy and is known to torture and destroy toys just for fun.
    Left alone in Sid's room, Woody and Buzz come upon a group of mis-matched toys, the results of Sid's many experiments. Woody and Buzz react in fear, thinking that the mismatched toys are man-eating cannibals. Meanwhile, at Andy's house, the toys continue to look for Buzz in the bushes. But when Andy and his mother come home, Andy notices that Woody's gone. The other toys wonder what has become of the two. Some are worried for both Buzz and Woody, while others express their hope that Woody has met a bad end. The next morning at Sid's house, Woody and Buzz, (the former having been burned on the forehead by Sid using a magnifying glass), try to escape, only to run into Sid's dog, Scud. Eventually, escaping from Sid's room, Buzz watches a TV commercial for the line of toys of himself and realizes that Woody was right about him being a toy this whole time, and not a real space ranger. However, in one final desperate attempt to fly, Buzz tries to fly out of the window by jumping off the guardrail of the stairs on the floor to fly out of Sid's house, only to fall to the floor, losing his left arm in the process. He is found by Sid's younger sister, Hannah, who takes him away to put him in her tea party.
    Woody finally finds Buzz in Hannah's room, disguised as Mrs. Nesbitt and attending a tea party. While Woody formulates a plan of escape, Buzz is too depressed to care. When Woody throws a string of Christmas lights across the way to the toys in Andy's room, Buzz refuses to back him up; Woody tries to use Buzz's detached arm in a desperate attempt to convince Andy's toys that Buzz is with him, but when they see through this act, they take it as evidence that Woody truly did murder Buzz and leave him in disgust for his duplicity. The Mutant Toys then return and swarm over Buzz, and Woody finds that they have repaired him and reconnected his arm. However, before Woody can make friends with them, Sid returns with his new acquisition, a firework rocket. He decides to blow up Woody with it, but cannot find him as Woody hides in a milk crate. Sid then decides to launch Buzz into space instead but is stymied by rainfall. He unknowingly traps Woody in the crate by putting a heavy toolbox on top, and plans to go ahead in the morning.

  • @gabrieltaraczuk2390
    @gabrieltaraczuk2390 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Hi king

  • @jasonchen4659
    @jasonchen4659 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Mario and his Brother Luigi were on the Way!

  • @jeannepujol2518
    @jeannepujol2518 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Je l'ai sur ma Switch 😊

  • @javy.airlines
    @javy.airlines 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great Play👍👏🎮!

  • @user-vv9cp8gc5r
    @user-vv9cp8gc5r 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Mario and Luigi

  • @thebeigesheep6132
    @thebeigesheep6132 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Why is it so bright owww

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fossils can be as large and perfectly preserved as an entire animal, complete with skin, hair, scales, or feathers.
    Richard Corliss of Time gave the film a positive review, saying "The plot matures handsomely; the characters neatly converge and combust; the gags pay off with emotional resonance." Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a B, saying "A Bug's Life may be the single most amazing film I've ever seen that I couldn't fall in love with." Paul Clinton of CNN gave the film a positive review, saying "A Bug's Life is a perfect movie for the holidays. It contains a great upbeat message ... it's wonderful to look at ... it's wildly inventive ... and it's entertaining for both adults and kids." Michael Wilmington of the Chicago Tribune gave the film three and a half stars out of four, and compared the movie to "Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai" (with a little of another art-film legend, Federico Fellini, tossed in)." where "As in 'Samurai', the colony here is plagued every year by the arrival of bandits." On the contrary, Stephen Hunter of The Washington Post gave the film a negative review, saying "Clever as it is, the film lacks charm. One problem: too many bugs. Second, bigger world for two purposes: to feed birds and to irk humans."
    November 14, 1998 (World)
    December 3, 1998 (Australia)
    February 5, 1999 (United Kingdom)
    Main article: A Bug's Life (video)
    The read-along version contains the very rare song, "A Place You've Never Been".
    This is the only Disney-Pixar animated feature film before Disney purchased the company that has not yet received a sequel or prequel.
    This is also the only Disney-Pixar film to have a "Widescreen Edition Release" on VHS.
    John Lassetter repeatedly attempted to get Robert De Niro to voice Hopper, the grasshopper, but De Niro repeatedly declined. DeNiro didn't do animated voice work at the time.
    This is the first and only Pixar film to be co-directed by Andrew Stanton, before he became a solo director for Finding Nemo, WALL·E and Finding Dory.
    In the bloopers shown at the end of the film, Princess Atta is shown cracking up during her scene with Hopper, ruining take after take until Hopper goes to his trailer in frustration. This is a spoof of Julia Louis-Dreyfus being known to do the same.
    The film is inspired by Aesop's fable, The Ant and The Grasshopper and is highly reminiscent of Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai and all of its successors, including The Magnificent Seven (which gave the villain a more prominent role than in Seven Samurai and had a similar scene in which the heroes are driven away from the people they were protecting) and Three Amigos! which was a comedic take on the story.
    This is the second film that Denis Leary and Kevin Spacey worked on. Their first film was Touchstone's 1994 Christmas comedy The Ref. Leary played the main antagonist Gus and Spacey played Lloyd who was taken hostage by Gus.
    This was the only Pixar film not to be broadcast on STARZ until 2016's Finding Dory, which streamed on Netflix.
    P.T. Flea is John Ratzenberger's favorite Pixar character that he voiced.
    This is the first Pixar film to be reframed for 4:3 televisions.
    This is the first Pixar film to be produced in a 2.39:1 widescreen aspect ratio, unlike the company's previous film which was produced in a 1.85:1.
    Two versions of the film have been released, each one with different fake outtakes over the end credits. The version released before December 18th, 1999 features a set, and the one released after that date has another. This was done because Disney hoped it would encourage people to view the film a second time. But in the VHS, the credits are poised away from the backgrounds shown next to them for a few seconds before the bloopers, but in the DVD, the credits are poised inside the backgrounds, and there are different lengths of bloopers switched around depending on the widescreen or fullscreen viewing, so don't expect to see the same version twice.
    During the summer of 1994, Pixar's story department began turning their thoughts to their next film, while Toy Story (1995) was in post-production. The storyline of A Bug's Life (1998) originated in a lunchtime conversation between John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton, Pete Docter, and Joe Ranft, the studio's head story team. Toy Story 2 (1999), Monsters, Inc. (2001), Finding Nemo (2003), and WALL·E (2008) were also conceived at this lunch. Lasseter and his story team had already been drawn to the idea of insects as characters. Insects, like toys, were within the reach of computer animation at the time due to their relatively simple surfaces. Stanton and Ranft wondered whether they could find a starting point in Aesop's fable The Ant and the Grasshopper. Walt Disney had produced his own version with a cheerier ending decades earlier in the 1934 short film The Grasshopper and the Ants (1934). In addition, Walt Disney Animation Studios had considered producing a film in the late 1980s entitled "Army Ants", that centered around a pacifist ant living in a militaristic colony, but it never fully materialized.
    This is the first film to be transferred directly from a digital source straight to VHS and DVD.
    This is the first Pixar film to be specifically reframed for 4:3 exhibition on VHS, DVD and televised airings.
    In Japan, the film's image song is "STAND" by the Japanese band Hoff Dylan. It is also the first song on the Japanese version of the film's soundtrack. (link)
    Some short clips of this film are featured in two of the Disney Villains mixes included on the bonus features in the DVD release of Mickey's House of Villains.
    The teaser trailer was attached to the 1997 re-release of The Little Mermaid.
    The theatrical trailer was attached to Mulan.
    The final trailer premiered on September 18, 1998, but was not attached to any film.
    This was one of Roddy McDowall's final roles, as this film was released after his death.
    This was the first Pixar film to feature a character's death. In fact, it was also the first one of such in which the main antagonist dies.
    At the start of the film, Hopper refers to the roles of ants in the world as "one of those circle of life kind of things"
    Next to the Caravan, the Pizza Planet Truck can be seen.
    PT Flea's Circus travels in a Casey Junior cookie box.
    A113 is seen on a box at Bug City.
    Woody makes a cameo in the outtakes, holding a clapperboard. It also marks the first time that a Toy Story character makes an appearance outside of the Toy Story franchise.
    A pair of unnamed ants, as well as Dot, follow Flik as he prepares to leave the island. After Flik gets across the valley and hits himself on a rock, one of the ants told the other "Your dad's right, he's gonna die.". However, in an earlier scene, the ant said that it was his dad who said that Flik's gonna die.
    Dot and the rest of the young ants are incorrectly depicted as nymphs. In real life, ants begin life as larvae, which later envelop into pupae, and finally hatch into adult ants.
    The drunk mosquito is clearly a male, while in real life, only female mosquitoes drink blood.
    The ant colony is made up of both male and female worker ants. In reality, all worker ants are female, but can't reproduce. And males, also known as drones, only serve to mate with the queen and die afterwards. The same is true with bees and wasps.
    In the opening sequence where the ants are loading the food onto the leaf, they show a panoramic shot of the scene, and you can see the Queen and Princess Atta standing under the shade near the center. But in the very next shot, the ants are still hauling the food and the royal family is not there.

  • @leannefamily5538
    @leannefamily5538 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Console name please? I would like to buy one for my daughter.

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fossils are the most important source of information about extinct species.
    Overnight, Woody tries to get Buzz to help him escape. Still depressed, Buzz pessimistically confesses that he is only a "stupid, little, insignificant" toy. Woody tries to convince him that being a toy is much better than being a Space Ranger, and Andy still thinks he's the best thing in the world. Buzz doesn't know why Andy would want him, and Woody explains while coming to terms with his own feelings of resentment:
    "Why would Andy want you? Look at you! You're a Buzz Lightyear. Any other toy would give up his moving parts just to be you. You've got wings, you glow in the dark, you talk, your helmet does that... that whoosh thing. You are a cool toy... as a matter of fact, you're too cool. I mean--I mean what chance does a toy like me have against a Buzz Lightyear action figure? [...] Why would Andy ever wanna play with me, when he's got you? I'm the one that should be strapped to that rocket..."
    As this happens, Buzz looks at his boot where Andy has signed his name, helping him realize how much Andy loves him and how being a toy isn't too bad. So even as a hopeless Woody tells Buzz to go on without him, save himself and get back to Andy, a reinvigorated Buzz helps Woody out of the crate. The two try to escape (although Buzz accidentally knocks the toolbox on Woody when trying to get the milk crate off of him). Unfortunately, Sid wakes up and takes Buzz out to blow him up, leaving Woody alone in the room. Even worse, Andy and his family are getting ready to move, with Andy depressed over having to have seemingly lost Woody and Buzz having only been able to find Buzz's cardboard spaceship and his cowboy hat. Desperate, Woody calls out to the Mutant Toys to help him, although it seemed they weren't willing to help him after Woody attacked them. Just when Woody was about to lose hope, Babyface convinces the Mutant Toys to help Woody as he tells him his plan, thanking them in the process.
    After a daring escape through the house and past Scud, Woody and the mutants end up in the yard with Sid. After getting into positions, Woody starts of the plan by speaking to him through his voice box just before Sid comes close to lighting the rocket, proceeding to tell him that his toys are sick of being tortured, breaking the rules as they allow Sid to see that they can move on their own, then with his own voice, Woody tells him (in a Kevin Conroy Batman-esque way) to play nice. This freaks Sid out and he runs into the house screaming, where his sister frightens him with her new doll Sally, a possible replacement for her original doll Janie, which was destroyed by Sid.
    Now freed from Sid, Woody and Buzz try to catch Andy's moving van just as it is pulling away from the house. After saying farewell to the Mutant Toys, a harrowing chase follows, with Scud chasing them and Andy's toys not helping, since they still think that Woody intentionally killed both Buzz and RC. Luckily, Woody and Buzz trap Scud and the other toys finally see that Woody was telling the truth and realized their mistake. Unfortunately, RC's batteries give out, so Woody lights the rocket strapped to Buzz by using Buzz's helmet to magnify the heat of the sun. They shoot into the air Woody drops RC into the van as they fly over, but not before hitting Mr. Potato Head. Just when it seems they would be destroyed by the rocket, Buzz activates his wings to sever the tape just before the rocket explodes. Buzz and Woody glide over the van and drop into Andy's car through the skylight. Woody and Buzz return to Andy, whose mom assumes they were in the car all along.
    A few months later, at Christmas in Andy's new house, Sarge and the soldiers are reporting the new presents received, similar to the birthday party, with the toys less worried about the new ones from now on. Mr. Potato Head is pleased to find out that Molly has been given a Mrs. Potato Head. The film ends with Woody and Buzz discussing being replaced by a new toy like Woody was almost replaced by Buzz, Woody poses the question to Buzz, "What could Andy possibly get that is worse than you?", and with the answer coming in the form of Andy's first present, a puppy which makes Woody and Buzz feel quite uneasy.
    Tom Hanks as Woody
    Tim Allen as Buzz Lightyear
    Don Rickles as Mr. Potato Head
    Jim Varney as Slinky Dog
    Wallace Shawn as Rex
    John Ratzenberger as Hamm
    Annie Potts as Bo Peep
    John Morris as Andy
    Erik von Detten as Sid Phillips
    R. Lee Ermey as Sarge
    Sarah Freeman as Hannah Phillips
    Laurie Metcalf as Andy's Mom
    Joe Ranft as Lenny[5]
    Jeff Pidgeon as Aliens
    Jack Angel as Rocky Gibraltar[6]
    Spencer Aste as Hurt Green Army Man[7]
    Craig Good as Star Command[8]
    Penn Jillette as TV Announcer
    Debi Derryberry as Pizza Planet announcer[9]
    Additional Voices are provided by Greg Berg, Lisa Bradley, Kendall Cunningham, Cody Dorkin, Bill Farmer, Gregory Grudt, Danielle Judovits, Sam Lasseter, Brittany Levenbrown, Sherry Lynn, Scott McAfee, Mickie McGowan, Ryan O'Donohue, Patrick Pinney, Phil Proctor, Jan Rabson, Andrew Stanton, and Shane Sweet.
    Toy Story began its life as an extension of Pixar's short Tin Toy, which featured Tinny, a mechanical drummer who tries to find his way in a baby's playroom. The original plot called for Tinny to butt heads with a ventriloquist's dummy. Ultimately, Tinny was found to be too immobile for the storyline and he was developed as a "space toy", first named Lunar Larry. His character was eventually renamed Buzz Lightyear, in honor of American Naval aviator and NASA Apollo astronaut Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin. The ventriloquist's dummy gradually evolved into a pull-string cowboy doll named Woody, in honor of Western actor Woody Strode. Woody's character was gradually made edgier during production, at the suggestion of Jeffrey Katzenberg, head of Disney. Pixar knew this was the wrong decision, but went ahead and complied with the requested script changes. Even Tom Hanks, Woody's voice actor, expressed his disapproval with the changes to Woody's character, going as far as shouting "This guy is a jerk!" in the middle of delivering one of his lines for the story reel. On November 19, 1993, a day that was later known at Pixar as "Black Friday," Pixar screened a mock-up of the film to Disney, who had agreed to own and distribute the film. The executives' reaction was overwhelmingly negative, and further work on Toy Story was shut down until writers had written with an acceptable script. In what would become a common reaction to production meltdowns on Pixar films, John Lasseter and the writers worked for months on a to rewrite the script before Disney approved further work on voice and animation. The shutdown had been terrifying for Pixar, but it ultimately showed both parties to trust the storytelling talents of the Pixar writers, and let Disney handle most corporate and marketing matters.
    Woody's final character was redefined as the benevolent, wise, and popular leader of Andy's toys instead of their tyrannical boss, but he maintained a lot of pride in being Andy's favorite toy. The original support group style discussion was replaced with a less juvenile and awkward staff meeting, to further emphasize the toys' approval of Woody's leadership and make it clear to Disney that Pixar had done much to improve his image. Buzz's character was also tweaked a little bit as well. Pixar altered his lines to make him seem more deluded and convinced that he is an actual Space Ranger. This allowed for more gags and comedic opportunities than was possible with the previous script and allowed buddy-comedy style interactions for the first time.
    Toy Story has received universal critical acclaim since its release in 1995. It holds a rare 100% Certified Fresh rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes and 92/100 on Metacritic. Time named it the 8th best film of 1995. In 2003 it was ranked 'the greatest animated movie of all time' by the Online Film Critics Society.
    More recently, famous movie director Terry Gilliam praised the film and said it's "a work of genius. It got people to understand what toys are about. They're true to their own character. And that's just brilliant. It's got a shot that's always stuck with me when Buzz Lightyear discovers he's a toy. He's sitting on this landing at the top of the staircase and the camera pulls back and he's this tiny little figure. He was this guy with a massive ego two seconds before... and it's stunning. I'd put that as one of my top ten films, period."
    Toy Story was the number one movie of the year in 1995 (beating Batman Forever and Apollo 13), according to Box Office Mojo. It opened the day before Thanksgiving and made almost $10 million on Wednesday and Thursday, plus another $29 million over the weekend. It was the number one film for its first 3 weekends, and then again the last weekend of December. During its theatrical run, it grossed $191.8 million domestically and $362 million worldwide. At the time it was the third highest-grossing animated film, behind The Lion King and Aladdin.

  • @TalkingFlower-wonders
    @TalkingFlower-wonders 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The red one is luigi
    The green one is Mario
    Did i get it right?

    • @Ziyaandow4690
      @Ziyaandow4690 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Not Quite Right, Mr. Talking Flower.
      The Red one is Mario
      And The Green one is Luigi.

    • @TalkingFlower-wonders
      @TalkingFlower-wonders หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Ziyaandow4690 oh, ok thank you!

    • @Ziyaandow4690
      @Ziyaandow4690 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TalkingFlower-wonders You’re Welcome.

  • @smallie210
    @smallie210 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The game looks too easy. I'm not keen on the elephant power up because of this

  • @_kullanici35
    @_kullanici35 หลายเดือนก่อน

    U deluxe was do much better

    • @Ziyaandow4690
      @Ziyaandow4690 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah, the only thing I don’t being in the Super Mario Series Are Time Limit.

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035
    @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    An extinct species is one that has died out.
    Although this movie was rated G in the United States, it was rated PG in the United Kingdom, likely due to Sid's violence and the ordeal with the mutant toys in his bedroom.
    Initial theatrical screenings of the film included a reissue of a Roger Rabbit short Rollercoaster Rabbit, while select screenings at the time included The Adventures of André and Wally B., a pre-Pixar short film that was produced by Lucasfilm in 1984. Though most home video releases do not include either of these shorts, the 2000 VHS reprint of Toy Story includes Tin Toy, Pixar's short film released in 1988.
    Four years later, Toy Story was followed by a sequel titled Toy Story 2 which was released in theaters on November 24, 1999. Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Annie Potts, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Jim Varney, Don Rickles, John Morris, Laurie Metcalf, R. Lee Ermey and Jeff Pidgeon all reprised the roles of their respective characters for the sequel. The film focused on Woody being stolen a greedy toy collector named Al McWhiggin (voiced by Wayne Knight) who plans to sell him to a toy museum in Tokyo, Japan and Buzz leading Rex, Hamm, Mr. Potato Head and Slinky Dog on a mission to save him.
    Eleven more years later, Toy Story was followed by a second sequel titled Toy Story 3 which was released in theaters and 3D on June 18, 2010. Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Don Rickles, John Morris, Laurie Metcalf, R. Lee Ermey and Jeff Pidgeon again reprised their character roles in this sequel. Jim Varney, who voiced Slinky in Toy Story 1 and 2 died in February 2000, three months after the theatrical released of Toy Story 2. In Toy Story 3, Slinky was Varney's good friend Blake Clark. The only still living Toy Story cast member who didn't return for the sequel was Annie Potts, the voice of Bo Peep, though her character made a brief silent cameo in the movie's opening. The third film focuses on Andy growing up and leaving for college and Woody, Buzz and the rest of his remaining toys accidentally donated to a Day Care Centre where they meet some not so friendly toys. Once there, Woody and his friends must get back to Andy before he leaves.
    It was announced in November 2014 that Pixar was working on a third sequel, Toy Story 4, which was released in theaters on June 21, 2019. The film focuses on a new "toy" that Bonnie creates named Forky, and Woody helping him realize what being a toy is all about.
    One year after Toy Story was released, there were ABC shorts called Toy Story Treats. In 2000, Pixar released a Buzz Lightyear spin-off film called Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins which later led to a TV series titled Buzz Lightyear of Star Command which aired 2000-2001. In 2011 and 2012, Pixar released three shorts film that follows the events of Toy Story 3 titled Toy Story Toons. The first one titled Hawaiian Vacation was released in theaters and 3D June 24, 2011, with Cars 2. The second one, Small Fry was released in theatres November 23, 2011, with The Muppets. The third one, Partysaurus Rex was released in theaters and 3D September 14, 2012 with the 3D-re-release of Finding Nemo. Plus Woody, Buzz, Rex and Mr. Potato Head has recently appeared in two television specials titled Toy Story of TERROR! and Toy Story That Time Forgot.
    See Merchandise
    Toy Story had a large promotion prior to its release, leading to numerous tie-ins with the movie, including images on food packaging. A variety of merchandise was released during the film's theatrical run and its initial VHS release including toys, clothing, and shoes, among other things. When an action figure for Buzz Lightyear and Sheriff Woody was created it was initially ignored by retailers. However, after over 250,000 figures were sold for each character prior to the movie's release, demand continued to expand, eventually reaching over 25 million units sold by 2007.
    Blu-ray.com: Toy Story
    'Toy Story': The Inside Buzz
    Box Office Mojo: Toy Story (1995)
    Toy Story English (Audio Description)
    th-cam.com/video/tslD04yOhe0/w-d-xo.html
    Jack Angel's Résumé. Arlene Thornton & Associates Inc.
    Spencer Aste Reel (1:43-2:06)
    Craig Good Voice Demo Reel (0:12-:17)
    Jeff Kays' email communication with Debi Derryberry, April 29, 2010.
    Pixar.com
    Doing this?!