Toy Story: Of Terror!

The story follows Bonnie and her mother on a road trip to Grandma’s house. A flat tire forces them to spend the night at the "Sleep Well" motel—a classic horror trope. While Bonnie sleeps, the toys venture out to explore, only to find themselves being picked off one by one by a mysterious, unseen creature.

The special uses the "Ten Little Indians" format, where the group gets smaller as members disappear into the shadows, a staple of films like Alien . Why It Works Toy Story of Terror!

Toy Story of Terror! works because it respects its audience. It manages to be genuinely "creepy" for kids without being traumatizing, and it offers enough cinematic DNA for adult horror buffs to enjoy. It treats its toys like real people in high-stakes situations, reminding us that even in a world of plastic and stuffing, the bravest thing you can do is keep moving forward when you're afraid. The story follows Bonnie and her mother on

Toy Story of Terror!: Pixar’s Perfect Love Letter to Horror The special uses the "Ten Little Indians" format,

A riff on G.I. Joe, Combat Carl is a battle-hardened action figure who speaks in the third person and provides Jessie with the motivation she needs to save her friends. His inclusion is a brilliant nod to the action-hero tropes of the era that inspired the horror films being parodied. Easter Eggs and Horror Tropes

While Woody and Buzz are usually the focal points, Toy Story of Terror! is unequivocally . The special uses the horror framework to tackle a very real psychological hurdle: Jessie’s claustrophobia and PTSD from her years spent in a cardboard box.

No horror movie is complete without a "survivor" archetype, and Pixar delivered an instant classic with (voiced by the legendary Carl Weathers).