Their toys are alive and can sometimes come to their aid, or get lost and Olie has to find them. They go to other planets. They go to the ice cream planet.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I always thought it would be cool to go to the island of misfit toys.
I do hear from people at my exhibition about seeing these things made from this toy from their childhood, and it brings them back. They'll go and buy a set of Lego from the gift shop because of that nostalgia and seeing it at the art exhibition.
Our babies are like penguins; penguin babies can't exist unless more than one person is taking care of them. They just can't keep going.
Each of the 'Toy Story's are telling an emotional story, but they're comedic. They're so successful creatively in terms of the stories they're telling. And they're pretty grounded.
I keep trying to understand the phenomenon of why adults are so literal when children are so imaginative. Toys are a caricature of reality.
Life is like a very short visit to a toyshop between birth and death.
One of the things that fascinates me most about the toys of the Sixties and Seventies is that they were characters without stories, as such.
Toys are put on this Earth to be played with by a child.
They make glorious shipwreck who are lost in seeking worlds.
Remember Star Trek? They're on this huge ship and they've got all these people, right? But you only see them, maybe they go on some mission and one of them gets killed.