Not too far ahead of them, was a shredder - two fast-spinning vertical cylinders with serrated teeth - and they were ripping right through anything caught in front of them. " Uh, you might wanna take a look again!" He called back.īraedimus looked ahead at what Slinky was talking about, and his optics widened in horror. "Don't worry, Slink! We'll get you down!" Woody called. "It's a magnet conveyor belt! Run!" She called out to everyone. "Slinky!" He then moved back, as several more metal objects were pulled up to the ceiling. "We'll be ok if we stay toge-" Braedimus was cut off when Slinky was pulled up to a fast-moving conveyor belt above them. The bulldozer stopped at the trench, but due to the laws of inertia, the toys and the garbage all tumbled down onto a conveyor belt, entering what could be a dark tunnel. The incinerator isnt the sad part (especially on repeat watches when you know they all live. It came out in my first year of university so I was a blubbering mess at that stage. The incinerator scene in Toy Story 3 represents a pivotal and emotionally powerful moment for Woody, Buzz, and the rest of the toy gang. My grown ass cried through the whole last 30 minutes. Everyone looked over to see another bulldozer right towards them, pushing them towards a trench. People always talk about the incinerator bit, but this is the scene that killed me. We're next." Daphne muttered in shock, her hands over her mouth. But then, bulldozer passed by, pushing the aliens away. The aliens then looked over and pointed to a giant claw in the distance, toddling towards it. "You got all your pieces?" He asked to her. The other toys emerged themselves from the trash, all of them having the wind knocked out of them from the fall and impact. "By the AllSpark." Braedimus muttered in horror. To continue publishing, please remove it or upload a different image. Oops! This image does not follow our content guidelines. Braedimus duh himself out of the mess, now looking around at the land before him Woody emerged from a heap of trash, standing up and looking around at the vast, wind-blown landfill. The toys screamed out, as they all slid out of the truck, down into the trash pile below them all. "Hold on! We're going in!" Braedimus and Woody called out. Trash soon began to pour out, along with the toys. The truck's brakes could be heard hissing, the truck coming to a halt. The toys inside of the truck looked around, alarmed and concerned about what could happen. The garbage truck soon arrived at the Tri-County landfill. Its harrowing stuff for an animated feature, but you can never quite tell what the toys find more threatening: death itself or the despair of becoming obsolete. 'Sunnyside is a place of ruin and despair, ruled by an evil bear who smells of strawberries' Mr. They toys are brought to a landfill, where they are dragged towards an incinerator, a fiery pit equivalent to any vision of Hell confected by Dante. It's like stepping into Dante's Inferno or even the Seven Circles of Hell. 'Welcome to Sunnyside, folks' Lotso greets Andys toys Sunnyside Daycare is a preschool/child care facility where Andys toys get accidentally donated in Toy Story 3. A torture chamber, before they're crushed, melted, broken apart, and turned into something else. It may look like an ordinary garbage dump to the regular human eye, but for a toy, it's their final resting place. I love the movie a lot but man does that scene drag down the rest of the film for me.The Tri-County Landfill. These toys have been through everything, so what did the incinerator scene add but a few tears in the audience? I really feel like it wrapped up the Toy Story saga perfectly. I honestly prefer this film over Toy Story 4. These are the toys that grabbed onto the wheel of a fucking plane to get home to their owner, but an incinerator is too much? Where's the struggle? Why the hell do they just give up? And what does it say that they get saved by the biggest cop-out, deus ex machina in recent film history.Īlso what did that moment do for the characters? Strengthen their bond? That was already strong when they escaped the daycare. Twelve years on and still not over this scene Comments. I guess what bothers me so much about it is that it completely goes against the spirit of the toys from the other two films. With everyone slowly holding hands and just accepting death, its so painfully forced. Its a great scene but from an entirely different movie. With everyone slowly holding hands and just accepting death, it's so painfully forced. I feel that the incinerator scene is insulating because it manipulates the audience into crying even though it makes no sense. It's a great scene but from an entirely different movie. I feel that the incinerator scene is insulating because it manipulates the audience into crying even though it makes no sense.
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