Toy Story 2 G 95%

In the pantheon of animated films, Toy Story 2 remains a singular achievement precisely because it refuses to infantilize its audience. It takes a premise of plastic and polyester and unearths the most human of fears: that we will be forgotten, that we will outlive our usefulness, or worse, that we will be preserved but never truly known. It teaches children that it is okay to grow up and move on, and it teaches adults that the courage to love, despite knowing it will end, is the only thing that makes us more than collectibles on a shelf.

At first glance, a sequel about talking toys seems an unlikely vehicle for existential dread. Yet, Toy Story 2 (1999), directed by John Lasseter, transcends its vibrant animation and slapstick comedy to deliver a startlingly mature meditation on mortality, purpose, and the nature of identity. While the original Toy Story grappled with the jealousy of being replaced, the sequel asks a far more devastating question: What is a toy’s purpose when the child grows up? Through the journey of Woody—a cowboy doll confronted with his own rarity and historical value—the film dismantles the simple binary of “played with” versus “abandoned,” ultimately arguing that a life without love is merely existence, not purpose. Toy Story 2 G

Juxtaposed against this museum-bound eternity is the counter-argument presented by Buzz Lightyear and the film’s breakout ensemble: Jessie the cowgirl and her horse, Bullseye. Jessie provides the emotional gut-punch that solidifies the film’s thesis. In a devastating flashback montage set to Sarah McLachlan’s “When She Loved Me,” Jessie recounts her life with a little girl named Emily. She shows the ecstasy of play, the loyalty of companionship, and then the slow, creeping neglect as Emily ages, culminating in Jessie being left in a donation box on a dusty roadside. Jessie is not broken or flawed like Woody; she is pristine, and that did not matter. Her trauma proves Pete’s argument wrong from the other side: immortality without love is not a gift; it is a prison of memory. Buzz understands this instinctively. When he finds Woody in the elevator, ready to go to Japan, he doesn’t argue about duty or loyalty to Andy. He simply says, “Woody, you’ve got a kid. And I’ve got a kid. And that’s the only thing that matters.” In the pantheon of animated films, Toy Story