After they escape, she traps them near the edge of a garbage chute and is ready to push them into the dumpster, should they not admit defeat. She is then seen visibly cringing at Lotso’s true character being revealed. Eventually, Lotso angrily orders Stretch to push the toys into the dumpster, which she refuses to do. Lotso is then thrown into the dumpster by Big Baby for his lies and treachery, and Stretch immediately leaves the area. In the credits, she welcomes new toys happily and is later seen sneaking a message to Woody and his friends in Bonnie’s backpack. Ken serves as a supporting antagonist for most of the third film, but later reforms.
Initially, Reptillus is resistant to the idea of being a plaything, feeling that to submit to the will of his child would be surrender and dishonorable. However, Trixie later helps him to see that being there for Mason is honorable, and he helps her divert Mason’s attention to his new toys. Near the end of Toy Story That Time Forgot, it is implied that he has a crush on Trixie.
He lives with his mother and his sister Molly until the third film, when he goes to college after turning 17. In Toy Story 2, Andy’s mother calls Woody “an old family toy” and Prospector calls him a hand-me-down toy. John Lasseter said “we always thought” that Woody was “kind of a hand-me-down” to Andy from his father. In Toy Story, he stands on his head for Buzz to run on his treads like a treadmill. In Toy Story 2, he assists Buzz in making sure all of Andy’s toys are accounted for once they learn of a yard sale.
Emperor Zurg is a robot alien villain action figure and Buzz Lightyear’s archenemy. A parody of Darth Vader from the Star Wars franchise, he has red eyes with neon gritting teeth, silver horns on his head, and a purple tunic with a black cape on it. He usually carries an “ion blaster” that actually fires plastic balls. He debuts in Toy Story 2 where he battles with Utility Belt Buzz Lightyear.
Zurg reveals he is 50 years older than the protagonist Lightyear. Zurg is the sound his robot minions make in reference to him (B’Zurg). The now-aged Buzz, assuming the identity of Zurg, controlling a mecha suit, travels back in time to confront his younger self and fix a mistake Zurg Lightyear perceives he made.
In Toy Story 2, a trio of aliens are hanging above the dashboard in the Pizza Planet truck. When the toys are having trouble getting the truck to move, the aliens tell Mr. Potato Head to “use the wand of power”, referring to the truck’s gear lever. They nearly fall out of the window, due to the sharp turns from Buzz trying to catch Al in his car.
Barbie later dumps Ken when she finds out he is a member of Lotso’s gang. She allows herself to be imprisoned with Andy’s toys, out of loyalty, and later tricks Ken into showing her some of his clothes, only to attack and tie him up and interrogate him about Lotso’s schemes. She later takes a stand with Woody and the other toys against Lotso, impressing them with her articulate arguments. She and Ken reunite when he confesses his love and defects to Woody’s side, claiming Barbie is not just one of “a hundred million” as Lotso says, but unique and special to him.
Thoroughbreds and Bad Education director Corey Finley returns with the story of aliens taking over the Earth’s economy. Gael García Bernal plays wrestler Saúl Armendáriz, the Liberace of Lucha Libre. Netflix biopic starring Colman Domingo as gay civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, who organized the 1963 March tanababyxo leak on Washington. Chris Rock, Glynn Turman, Audra McDonald, Jeffrey Wright and CCH Pounder also star. Netflix and Aardman’s stop-motion sequel to the beloved animated comedy Chicken Run. In the first Brazilian action movie on Netflix, a truck racing driver puts the pedal to the metal with a cargo robbery gang.