Crying...


I'm a grown man of 30 and the ending made me cry!

Anyone else share a similar experience?

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I'm a 17 year old British boy. I watch Toy Story and Toy Story 2 as a child, and I can now drive, and I watched this in the cinema with my Mum. I was sobbing from the start, as soon as "You've got a friend in me" started playing, due to remembering my own childhood, watching the films. Also at the end when Andy can drive: I drove my family to the cinema for the first time that day! My Mum and I wept together, and I realised how much changes in such a short time. My younger sisters couldn't really undersand the big deal, though!

So yes, this film is fantastic and truely the saddest film I have watched, more than Millon Dollar Baby, Titanic, The Lion King (great as those films are) and others because I can really relate to it. POWERFUL STUFF

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I didn't stay for the ending. Left during the incinerator scene. Toy Story 1 is one of my favorite films, was pretty disappointed, but not to the point of tears.

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Well you kinda missed the most emotional moment.

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I bawled many times. But I’m a pregnant woman, so the hormones are a’flowin. ;)

Taking back IMDB message boards....one ignored Troll at a time.

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No, but I think I was really close. The burning scene and the farewell scene...

"I'm gonna get medieval on your ass!"

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I cried watching Andy and Bonnie play those toys together.

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I was on the verge of crying as the toys held hands and prepared to be burned together. A few finally managed to trickle out when Andy held Woody for the last time.

I try to be good hard-worker-man, but refrigemater so messy, so so messy.

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I didn't cry during the incinerator scene, but I did cry at the end when Woody parted from Andy for the last time.

I'm an adult. I noticed many adults in the (packed) theater were weeping, but no kids.

Adults can understand the message that everything changes, but young children don't.






Time of your life, huh, kid?

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I'm 20 years old and I cried at the ending mainly because I saw the first one in the theatre when I was 5, and seeing it again on the big screen made me feel like a little girl again, and reminded me that no matter how much some of us wish it...you can never go back to childhood. It made me realized that how shortlived such a thing is...but that even as adults...you can appreciate what you had as children.

u r not a beautiful & unique snowflake, u r the same decaying organic matter as everything else

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If you've grown up with Toy Story, it's hard not to be touched by the ending, because you know that not only Andy is saying goodbye to his childhood. You are as well...:(

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This.

I'm 22, grew up with Toy Story, just graduated from college, and I completely broke down at the end. It just really hit home for me.
How Pixar does it, I have no idea.

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20 here and I survived The Lion King when I was young.

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