Pixar has returned to its best-known brand with “Toy Story 5,” which opened in cinemas this weekend and is already drawing strong box office results in Israel and abroad. The review notes that the studio, after a recent drought, has once again leaned on a beloved franchise that has long been a reliable crowd-pleaser. In local theaters, the film is screening both in its original version and dubbed version, with Conan O’Brien replaced in the Hebrew dub by Kfir Medinitsky.
The film is directed by Andrew Stanton, a Pixar veteran, and co-written with McKenna Grace. The cast includes the familiar characters Woody, Buzz Lightyear and Jessie, voiced in English by Tom Hanks, Tim Allen and Joan Cusack, and in Hebrew by Dror Keren, Alon Neuman and Noa Goren. The new addition is a tablet voiced by Greta Lee in English and Noa Lefidot in Hebrew. The reviewer says the story is centered on Bonnie, now 8 and set in 2026, who has moved on from her old toys and become absorbed by screens.
The review argues that the movie is overstuffed, noisy and only moderately creative, with too many plotlines and characters and not enough emotional focus. It says the film tries to warn about children’s dependence on digital devices, yet also softens that message by suggesting technology can still connect people. The critic calls that message weak, while also saying the animation looks mostly pale and the voice performances sound routine in the original version.
Even so, the film is expected to be a major commercial hit because of the franchise name and iconic characters. The review says it is more than a little entertaining, especially for families, and that it touches on mature themes such as abandonment, separation, friendship and the need for human connection. It also notes that Taylor Swift wrote the title song, and predicts the song may reach the Oscars stage in about nine months.