
Ducky and Bunny try to say "To indecency and.!" / "To infrequently and.!" before Buzz appears and says the quote properly. Bunny then thinks the phrase is "To immunity and respond!". Ducky incorrectly replies "To insanity and a blonde!". Bunny incorrectly says "To infinity and your mom!". The Ducky and Bunny Trailer mentions this phrase multiple times as the duo try to imitate Buzz. Buzz says "To infinity." which immediately cuts to Woody saying ".and beyond.". Buzz and Woody say this phrase at the film's ending after they part ways for the final time as Woody joins Bo Peep and her friends while Buzz and the rest of the gang remain with Bonnie. Bunny and Ducky later say mock versions of the phrase while bullying Buzz in the carnival, believing he wants to take away their position of jackpot, most notably "to infinity and my foot!" as Ducky kicks Buzz in the head. Buzz's voice box says the phrase when Buzz tries to get advice from his "inner voice" as part of the plan to save Woody and Forky. Young Andy says the phrase while playing with Buzz in another flashback in the opening montage. Buzz's voice box says the phrase when Young Andy is playing with him during a flashback in the opening montage. Buzz's voice box says the phrase when Bonnie presses one of his talk buttons. Referenced again by Woody, after Buzz reawakens to his normal self from being hit by a television and asks where he has been, Woody replies, "Beyond infinity.". Referenced by Woody, as Buzz tells him that they will be together, to which Woody replies, "For infinity and beyond.". Buzz in Andy's realistic imagination, after lifting a train up out of a ravine. Referenced by Woody, who tells Buzz that he will have old Buzz Lightyear to keep him company "for infinity and beyond.". Utility Belt Buzz, as the elevator takes him and the toys up to Al's Penthouse. Utility Belt Buzz, as he prepares to "blast through the roof.". When Buzz departs Andy's room to go on his mission to rescue Woody, he spoofs the phrase by saying "To Al's Toy Barn, and beyond!". Andy, as he impersonates Buzz in his playtime before leaving for Cowboy Camp. Buzz in the video game, as he uses his anti-gravity belt to propel himself back up. Woody, as he and Buzz fly down slowly in the air while trying to catch up with the moving truck. Sid, as he takes Buzz out of his room to be blown up. Woody, impersonating Buzz, as he tries to convince the other toys that Buzz is with him. Buzz, just before jumping from the railing at Sid's house. The phrase is heard in a commercial advertising Buzz Lightyear toys. Andy, as he plays with Buzz before the family outing at Pizza Planet. Buzz Lightyear, just before demonstrating how he flies to the toys.
#Toy story at 20 to infinity and beyond series#
1.5 Buzz Lightyear of Star Command TV series.Join Pixar executives and filmmakers as they take a look back at computer animation, what challenges they have overcome and what they still hope to conquer. As we celebrate the 20th anniversary of the first computer generated feature film, 1995’s "Toy Story,” Pixar takes a look back – from that first animated hand, to candy commercials and feature films, and the paradigm shift that occurred along the way.
Pixar Animation Studios, led by Catmull and creative master John Lasseter, has been at the forefront of this evolution, blurring the line between art and technology and bringing characters to life with more realism, heart, and beauty than ever before.
When graduate student Ed Catmull digitized and animated a plaster cast of his hand, it signaled the beginning of an entire new medium of cinematic expression: computer generated animation. From flipbooks to feature films, animation has taken audiences to fantastical new worlds, far beyond the limits of any real-world setting.