Is toy story 4 the last one

Spoiler alert! The following details the ending of "Toy Story 4," so beware if you haven't seen it yet.

Woody, Buzz and their plastic pals add new member Forky to their gang in “Toy Story 4” (in theaters now), but by the end of the animated movie, they’re saying adios to an all-timer.

Much of the new film focuses on Woody's (voiced by Tom Hanks) adventure to rescue Forky (Tony Hale) from the creepy-doll clutches of Gabby Gabby (Christina Hendricks) in a small-town antique shop, and along the way, Woody re-teams with more-than-just-a-friend Bo Peep (Annie Potts), who now enjoys the freedom of living as a lost toy after she and the pull-string sheriff had their emotional goodbye nine years prior.

Seriously, this is your last chance to bail out, because things are about to get super-spoilery. 

Is toy story 4 the last one

An action-packed climax at a nearby carnival ends in a happy finale for everyone, even Gabby Gabby. But it doesn’t include Woody driving off with Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) and all his friends who grew up with Andy (see: the previous three “Toy Story” films) and now are there for Bonnie in her formative years.

Instead, Woody decides to seek the path not yet taken – at least for him – and hit the road with a new bunch that includes Bo, mini-cop Giggle McDimples (Ally Maki) and carnival prizes Ducky (Keegan-Michael Key) and Bunny (Jordan Peele). Woody chooses his own happiness and being with Bo rather than going back to Bonnie's toy box, and the end-credits scene – with Ducky and Bunny going crazy with giving out gifts to kids – hints that this group has a fun future ahead. 

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It’s “a huge change of perception” for Woody that’s “not about closing a door on some other way of living. He doesn't become a monk or something like that,” Hanks tells USA TODAY. “He goes off and forms this other bond with the outside world based on him being a toy and it's pretty profound.”

Buzz’s emotional line to his departing buddy – “Bonnie will be fine” – doesn’t just mean that she’ll be OK without the heroic cowboy, Hanks says. “He's saying she'll be fine because she has us, and the truth is Woody does not have the bond with Bonnie that he had with Andy. So Bonnie is not going to be broken as Andy would have been if this had happened long before.

“To be alive is to be in a constant state of change,” the Oscar-winning actor adds. “How can it be that these movies about toys actually do teach us about what it is to be human beings? It's extraordinary and my hat is off to the Pixar Imagineers that make it happen.”

Is toy story 4 the last one

Toy Story 4 Woody's hat tip goodbye

Warning: spoilers are in play. If you haven’t seen the latest chapter in Pixar’s landmark franchise, you’ve got a friend in us, but you might want to read a different story.

To land on an ending as heartwarming and effective as the one Toy Story 3 did, with Andy giving his legendary toys to Bonnie, is something every long-running franchise wishes it could land. Yet somehow, Toy Story 4 landed its own ending that not only respected the events of its predecessors, it outdid the third movie's ending on an emotional scale.

With Tom Hanks’ Woody and Annie Potts’ Bo Peep reunited, and Forky taking his place at the center of Bonnie’s play group, everything led to a bittersweet finale that saw the main characters start brand new lives. And that’s exactly why, from the bottom of my heart as a fan, I think Toy Story 4 needs to be the final one in the series.

If you still need some convincing, consider the following:

Toy Story 4 Andy playing with Woody and Buzz in the yard.

Woody And Buzz Are Split Up

Historically, the Toy Story franchise has always seen Tom Hanks and Tim Allen at the center of the universe, as Woody and Buzz, respectively. While new toys and new pitfalls have been introduced into the story throughout each entry, the constant has been that these two friends have paired up through it all. Of course, Toy Story 4 splits that lynchpin pair up for good, which means it’s time to let them have their own lives.

Now that we’ve seen that Woody and Buzz can live productive lives without each other, there’s no reason to keep pairing them up for the sake of doing just that. When you split a pair like this apart, it means the end of an era that you generally can’t come back from. To make a Toy Story 5 where the two characters all of a sudden re-team out of the blue would ruin the power of their final conversation in this current movie. In Toy Story 4’s big adventure, both toys became leaders in their own right. Now, there’s no need for them to lean on each other.

Toy Story 4 Woody and Forky walking down the highway

The Ending Ties Up Woody And Buzz’s Stories Perfectly

While we’re on the subject of Woody and Buzz, we’ve seen these characters grow to the point where Toy Story 4 puts them in the places they were always working toward. The cowboy toy who was always obsessed with being owned by a kid has now learned to loosen up and live the life of a lost toy, independently. So Woody’s story arc in the Toy Story universe has come full circle.

Meanwhile, Buzz Lightyear went from being an imposing presence to a trusted friend who knew how to co-lead the gang of toys through the complexities and adventures in life with Andy and Bonnie. But now, with Bonnie Hunt’s Dolly in charge and Buzz finding his "inner voice,"  there should already be an easy way for life without Woody to work. Plus, if anyone should be there to help Forky train Knifey in the ways of being a proper toy, the formerly delusional spaceman is the best candidate. Again, another story arc has been closed and finished perfectly, without a need for further meddling.

Toy Story 4 Ducky and Bunny sitting at their carnival game

Shorts With New Characters Would Be More Exciting

As I'm sticking firmly to the belief that Toy Story 4 should be the final film in this iteration, that’s not to say that there aren’t tons of toy stories in this universe to be told. It’s just that as far as the franchise’s proper entries go, that mine has been stripped. Not to mention, when you look to the contracts of actors like Tim Allen, their obligations look to be covered after Toy Story 4. So while renegotiating the landmark talent for further films might cost Disney/Pixar a pretty penny, shorts with some of the newer toys or even new adventures with the older supporting toys from Toy Story history just might be the ticket.

We saw this work well in the years between Toy Story 3 and Toy Story 4, through shorts and specials like “Partysaurus Rex” and Toy Story of Terror! The tradition is about to continue too, with Forky Asks A Question set to be a series of Disney+ shorts. So there are always opportunities to give someone else the spotlight in new, compact adventures that are solely meant to entertain. (Like, say, a buddy cop dramedy entitled Ducky and Bunny: Plush Rush Miami).

Toy Story 4 main cast lineup in the antique store

Pixar Should Be Creating New Franchises To Experiment With

The last big reason that Toy Story 4 should be the final entry in the proper canon of Toy Story films is, quite frankly, one Pixar itself has already mentioned as an ongoing concern: the studio needs to start moving away from sequels. While the top brass have been lucky with the franchises they’ve tended to so far, it has to be said that when the people at Pixar are at their best, they’re creating new worlds.

If new paths aren’t worn, and new trails aren’t blazed, the next Incredibles or Wall-E will never be found. Considering how Toy Story 4 went from a movie that needed to convince the world it should exist into the success it currently is, it's easy to see why sequels may seem like a good idea. However, if the company wants to stay fresh, it will keep to the promise of moseying onto the next wagon trail and reaching for the sky with new ideas.

The Toy Story movies have given the world a lot to enjoy over the course of almost a quarter of a century. That’s a lot of time to be hanging around with a pull-string cowboy and a Space Ranger, and while it hasn’t been wasted, it’s definitely time to see what lies beyond their corner of the world.

Toy Story 4 understands this as a film, and it’s time that all who love this series tip their hats respectfully, and make their way into the future. That, and considering how bittersweet/downright tear-jerking the endings to Toy Story 3 and Toy Story 4 are, they’d probably have to go to some unhappy lengths to top them.

If you want to enjoy one last round-up with the gang, Toy Story 4 is currently in theaters. But if you’re ready to see what’s new in the world of either animation or live-action, the 2019 release schedule is here to save the day!

CinemaBlend's James Bond (expert). Also versed in Large Scale Aggressors, time travel, and Guillermo del Toro. He fights for The User.

Will there ever be a Toy Story 5?

For the 2022 film, see Lightyear. Toy Story 5 is a computer-animated 3D comedy-drama film produced by Pixar Animation Studios for Walt Disney Pictures as the fifth installment in the Toy Story series and the sequel to 2019's Toy Story 4. It was released to theaters and 3D on June 16, 2023.

Is Toy Story 4 the last Pixar sequel?

Toy Story 4 is a 2019 American computer-animated comedy-drama film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It is the fourth installment in Pixar's Toy Story series and the sequel to Toy Story 3 (2010). ... .

Why did Toy Story 4 end that way?

At the ending of Toy Story 4, all the toys part their ways and Gabby gets rejected by her ideal owner. Later, Gabby sees a lost girl crying in the carnival and decides that she will become that child's toy. At the carousel, Woody and Bo share an emotional bittersweet goodbye but Woody is hesitant to leave Bo again.

Is Toy Story 5 the last Toy Story?

The Toy Story franchise consists mainly of five CGI-animated films: Toy Story (1995), Toy Story 2 (1999), Toy Story 3 (2010), Toy Story 4 (2019), and the spin-off prequel film within a film Lightyear (2022).