![]() ![]() ![]() Once Woody encounters his long-lost love Bo Peep (Annie Potts) during a road trip, he’s given an obvious option that seems existentially terrifying: be a toy without an owner. As a reaction to this, Woody throws himself into helping out Bonnie’s new toy, the spork Forky (Tony Hale), but it’s evident that he’s only doing so to distract himself from accepting that his presence is no longer truly necessary in her bedroom. Can you blame her?) Her world of play is plenty imaginative, but there’s apparently no room for Woody anymore. (As gutting as it may be for us to watch Bonnie ignore Woody, she’s a little kid in the 21st century, and he’s a pull-string doll from the 1950s. Marvelously voiced once again by Tom Hanks, Woody struggles to accept his place in a new world where Bonnie, the little girl who was given Woody at the end of Toy Story 3, is interested in other toys. The answer is made clear early in Toy Story 4. Instead of being quite the same kind of ensemble piece, the film focuses on letting go and moving on in the form of Sheriff Woody himself.
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