Toy Story 2 1999 In Urdu English Free Download Torrent
Toy Story 2
(1999)
Ratings:
7.9/10 from 231,230 users
Metascore: 88/100
Reviews: 475 user | 177 critic | 34 from Metacritic.com
When Woody is stolen by a toy collector, Buzz and his friends vow to
rescue him, but Woody finds the idea of immortality in a museum
tempting.
Directors:
John Lasseter,
Ash Brannon
Writers:
John Lasseter (original story),
Pete Docter (original story)
Stars:
Tom Hanks,
Tim Allen,
Joan Cusack |
Story
forgot something about toys a long time ago, and "Toy Story 2''
reminded me. It involves the love, pity and guilt that a child feels for
a favorite toy. A doll or an action figure (or a Pokemon) is yours in
the same way a pet is. It depends on you. It misses you. It can't do
anything by itself. It needs you and is troubled when you're not there.
"Toy Story 2'' knows this, and for smaller viewers that knowledge may
be the most important thing about the film--more important than the
story or the skill of the animation. This is a movie about what you hope
your toys do when you're not around--and what you fear. They have lives
of their own, but you are the sun in the sky of their universe, and
when you treat them badly, their feelings are wounded.
The story begins with Andy, the little boy who owns the Toy Story
toys, going off to camp. Woody, the cowboy, is in bad shape with a torn
arm, and gets left behind. This is crushing to Woody, but worse is to
come, when he gets scooped up at a garage sale by Big Al the toy
collector, repaired, mended and repainted--and scheduled for sale to a
toy museum in Japan.
At first this adventure is kind of fun for Woody, who finds out for
the first time that he is part of a set of toys, the Roundup Gang, that
also includes a cowgirl named Jessie, a horse named Bullseye and a
prospector named Stinky Pete. Woody is blown away to discover he even
starred in a black-and-white TV puppet show in the '50s, and begins to
think that since Andy might eventually abandon him, he might enjoy
retiring as the star attraction in a toy museum.
Meanwhile, Buzz Lightyear and the other toys discover what has
happened and lead a dangerous crosstown mission to rescue Woody. And we
begin to get insights into the private lives of toys. Stinky Pete, for
example, is bitter because no kid ever bought him, and he's still in his
original box. Jessie is spunky and liberated, but this cowgirl does get
the blues; she sings the winsome "When She Loved Me'' about her former
owner Emily, who tossed her under the bed and forgot her. "You never
forget kids, but they forget you,'' Buzz sighs, but he argues for the
position that it is better to be loved for the length of a childhood
than admired forever behind glass in a museum.
The movie once again features the enchanting three-dimensional feel
of computer-generated animation by Pixar, and has been directed by John Lasseter,
the creator of the original "Toy Story.'' The tale of this film is
almost as thrilling as Woody's fate: It was originally intended as a
lowly direct-to-video release, but then the early scenes played so well
that Pixar retrenched and started over again with a theatrical feature.
In other words, this isn't a made-for-video that they decided to put
into theaters, but a version intended from the first to be theatrical.
That's important, because it means more detail and complexity went into
the animation.
The stars of the voice track certainly seem to remember how they once
identified with toys. Many of the actors from the first movie are back
again, including Tom Hanks as Woody, Tim Allen as Buzz, Don Rickles as Mr. Potato Head and Jim Varney as Slinky Dog. The key newcomer is Joan Cusack
as Jessie the Cowgirl, and she brings new life to the cast by
confronting the others for the first time with a female character who's a
little less domestic than Mrs. Potato Head.
Hanks is responsible for what's probably the movie's high point; he
sings "You've Got a Friend in Me,'' and seems to speak for all toys
everywhere. His Woody has, indeed, grown into quite a philosopher. His
thoughts about life, love and belonging to someone are kind of profound.
The screenplay by Andrew Stanton, Rita Hsiao, Doug Chamberlin and Chris Webb
isn't just a series of adventures (although there are plenty of those)
but a kind of inside job, in which we discover that all toys think the
way every kid knows his toys think
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