What a second (or third) watch with the captions on taught me about Pixar’s masterpiece.
We all know the lines by heart. “There’s a snake in my boot!” “To infinity… and beyond!” “You are a toy !”
When Buzz sees the TV commercial revealing he is a toy, there is a long pause. The subtitle reads: .
That’s not a sound effect. That’s acting. Tim Allen’s delivery of a single, ragged breath is the entire turning point of the film. Reading it highlighted the sheer terror of an existential crisis happening inside a plastic spaceman. Yes, subtitles are a vital tool for the deaf and hard of hearing community. But for the rest of us, turning them on for a movie you think you know by heart is a form of active listening.
For 25 years, Toy Story has been the gold standard of animated storytelling. We’ve watched Woody and Buzz’s rivalry turn into the greatest bromance in cinema history more times than we can count. But here’s a confession: I had never watched it with the subtitles on.
What a second (or third) watch with the captions on taught me about Pixar’s masterpiece.
We all know the lines by heart. “There’s a snake in my boot!” “To infinity… and beyond!” “You are a toy !”
When Buzz sees the TV commercial revealing he is a toy, there is a long pause. The subtitle reads: .
That’s not a sound effect. That’s acting. Tim Allen’s delivery of a single, ragged breath is the entire turning point of the film. Reading it highlighted the sheer terror of an existential crisis happening inside a plastic spaceman. Yes, subtitles are a vital tool for the deaf and hard of hearing community. But for the rest of us, turning them on for a movie you think you know by heart is a form of active listening.
For 25 years, Toy Story has been the gold standard of animated storytelling. We’ve watched Woody and Buzz’s rivalry turn into the greatest bromance in cinema history more times than we can count. But here’s a confession: I had never watched it with the subtitles on.