As I discussed in Part 1 of this series,
Toy Story
does a wonderful job of building its structure around the greatest
wish of its main characters: to be loved and played with by
children.
When the toys feel that their owner Andy no longer cares about
them, this desperate desire forces them to question their loyalty
to him and seek out love and attention from new children at a
daycare center.
The Beauty of Unexpected Consequences
Great writers know that however beautiful or benign the character's
greatest wish may seem, they must explore both the best and the
worst possible implications of fulfilling that wish. And the toys
of Toy Story get a heck of a lot more than they bargained for.
Trapped in a playroom ruled by a psychotic strawberry scented bear,
and filled with insane toddlers, the non-age-appropriate toys are
literally tortured by the fulfillment of their own greatest desire,
played with nearly to death, until the best thing they can hope for
is to somehow escape to a life of confinement in Andy's attic-- the
very fate that they were fleeing when they came to the daycare
center in the first place.
When you can make your main characters run from the very thing they
most want, you know you are succeeding as a writer.
Toy Story 3 pushes this irony even further by exploring yet another
riff on the theme of loyalty: the journey of the one toy Andy still
loves enough to take with him to college: Woody the Cowboy.
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Date Published: Jan 05, 2011 - 1:32 am