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Every Pixar Movie, Ranked Worst To Best

With the release of Inside Out over the weekend, and the collective agreement that Pixar "is back," it's easy to begin wondering where the studio's newest animated flick sits amongst the rest of its pantheon of classics. We Got This Covered tasked me with updating its ranking of the now-15-film-strong studio to see where the movies of the legendary Disney-owned animation warehouse sit next to one another.

5) Toy Story 3 (2010)

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Perhaps the most controversial move so far in the ranking, to list what many considered the last great Pixar flick (until this past weekend, that is) at such a middling mid-point. Thankfully, Toy Story 3 is anything but middling. Sure, it may share a largely similar plot to its predecessor (thrilling prison-break scene late-in-the-game not included), but it catapults the central gang into another series of exciting misadventures, facing not only the fear of Andy’s impending adulthood and their place in it — but their entire reason for existing in the first place.

Pixar’s decision to age Andy up along with the target audience, who were kids when the original two came out, threatens to be mawkish, but only drags the emotional knife in deeper by the time the final scene comes around. Like many, it was just the perfect movie, at the perfect time, about the perfect subject, and its message of growing up and leaving a certain part of your life behind is simultaneously overwhelming and triumphant.

Many evoke the penultimate furnace set-piece as the trilogy’s most emotionally intense sequence, but I dare anyone attached to a Barbie or set of LEGO growing up to make it through Andy’s final playdate with Woody, Buzz, and the gang – and vibrant Bonnie – without getting misty-eyed. Go ahead, I’ll wait.

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