Toy Story 5
Posted on June 18, 2026 at 11:16 am
A-| Lowest Recommended Age: | Kindergarten - 3rd Grade |
| MPAA Rating: | Rated PG for some thematic elements and rude humor |
| Profanity: | None |
| Nudity/ Sex: | Potty humor |
| Alcohol/ Drugs: | None |
| Violence/ Scariness: | Cartoon-style peril and action, no one badly hurt |
| Diversity Issues: | A theme of the movie |
| Date Released to Theaters: | June 19, 2026 |

The toys are back in town! Thankfully, we may grow older, but they stay the same. Well, almost. It’s been 36 years since “Toy Story,” the first feature-length computer animated film, dazzled us with its technical brilliance but was unforgettable because of its heart and wit and irresistible characters. Remember that the reason Pixar’s first feature was about plastic toys was that smooth, shiny surfaces was pretty much the only thing they could create in those early years of digital animation. Even then, right at the very beginning, Pixar addressed the complications of changes in technology, in the potential replacement of a beloved cloth-covered cowboy toy who had a pull-string with a plastic space adventurer who had wings and a light-up wrist weapon. And even then, in what would become one of Pixar’s most perceptive and meaningful themes, the bittersweet changes that come with growing up. Endearingly, it is also about the beauty of imagination, with the series itself a perfect exemplar. I love Pixar’s love for the weirdos because they are the ones who grow up and create magic.
One of my favorite details from the first film was the difference in the way Andy wrote his name on the boots of the two toys. He got Woody (Tom Hanks) when he was younger, so the N was backwards. But he had learned more when he received Buzz, and wrote his name correctly. And one of my favorite details from the series overall is that the first film begins with a painted sky on Andy’s ceiling. Then, when he leaves for college, having given his toys to Bonnie, we see him leaving, with the real, endless sky above him. These show the care that goes into every detail and the vision that extends beyond each film.
Every move toward independence and adulthood means leaving something behind. The “Toy Story” series has served as something of a meta-measuring stick to help us consider our own changes, with the children who saw the first one in theaters now bringing their own children to part 5. And through the magic of animation, they are able to appreciate that Tom Hanks and Tim Allen may get older, but they are still our Woody and Buzz.
Now in the fifth episode, it is all about new technology, this time as a central theme, explored with insight, adventure, and hilarious jokes. At 8, Bonnie still loves playing with her toys, and the movie begins with a hilarious “wedding” between Forky (Tony Hale) and Karen Beverly (Knifey, voiced by Melissa Villaseñor) that is disrupted when the maid of honor, Rex the T-Rex (Wallace Shawn) is poisoned.
Two new children have moved in across the street, but Bonnie is more comfortable with imaginary friends than real ones and is too shy to ask them to play with her. Her classmates have given up toys to play with LilyPad (Greta Lee), and Bonnie’s parents think she might be able to connect with them virtually, so they get one for her.
At first, it seems to work well. Bonnie is accepted into the virtual friend group and loves playing games so much she all but forgets her analog toys. She is delighted when she is asked to a slumber party, but the girls make fun of her for bringing her Jessie (Joan Cusack) doll. Bonnie wants to be a part of the group so she pretends to be too grown-up for toys, leading to one of the best movie lines of the year. Rex says, “Extinction! Not again!”
The toys are devastated, and the story allows Woody and Duke Kaboom (Keanu Reeves) who in the last epsiode were off on their own, to come back for support. Jessie is the heart of this epsiode, though, and with her trusty horse Bullseye, she is the one who figures out how to get Bonnie a friend and leads the rest through their adventures. She also learns some important lessons that help her understand her value and heal some past hurts.
There are some new characters, including discarded toys with once state-of-the-art tech that is now charmingly nostalgic. They include a potty-training aid called Smarty Pants providing some poop humor (Conan O’Brien), a hippo-shaped map toy named Atlas (Craig Robinson), and a camera toy with pixels almost as big as a postage stamp called Snappy (Shelby Rabara). Even though we see him only briefly, I have to mention the plastic slice of pizza with sunglasses because he is voiced by Super Bowl superstar Bad Bunny.
Even Buzz gets an tech upgrade as we meet crates-full of new and improved Buzzes that have some cool new functions but just as much existential confusion as Buzz in the first movie.
As often happens in “Toy Story,” the characters get separated from their child and each other, so there is a lot of adventure along the way. And there are new human characters, including a horse-loving girl named Blaze (Mykal-Michelle Harris) who could also use a friend who shares her love of imagination. Past “Toy Story” villains have included Sid, who loved to take the toys apart and blow them up, and Al, who saw the value of toys only in what he could get from selling mint, never-played-with versions. The threat here, from LilyPad, who begins by feeling threatened herself by the analog toys and committed to helping Bonnie “reach all of her developmental goals,” is tempered by a thoughtful, nuanced exploration of what it means to be useful, and recognition that it is difficult to lose a child to aging out of the toy stage, but what you give them helps them forever.
NOTE: Stay through the credits for extra scenes.
Parents should know that this movie includes peril and action, with no serious injuries, as well as a sensitive exploration of issues of agency, identity, and loss. And some poop humor.
Family discussion: What is or was your favorite toy and why? Which is your favorite of Bonnie’s toys? When do you use your imagination?
If you like this try: The “Toy Story” series and all of the Pixar films






