By Patrick Cremona

Published: Monday, 13 June 2022 at 12:00 am


3.0 out of 5 star rating

At the beginning of Lightyear – Pixar’s new Toy Story spin-off movie – some text flashes up on screen informing us that the film we’re about to watch had been Andy’s personal favourite back in 1995, the very one that had encouraged him to buy his beloved Buzz Lightyear toy all those years ago.

While this is unquestionably a more coherent introduction to the film than star Chris Evans’ much-mocked statement when it was initially announced – “This isn’t Buzz Lightyear the toy. This is the origin story of the human Buzz Lightyear that the toy is based on” – it also means the film is setting itself rather an ambitious target: for it to really be considered a success on its own terms, Lightyear has to convincingly seem like it could be the very favourite film of at least a portion of its young target audience.

To truly answer whether it succeeds on those grounds you’d probably be better off asking a group of pre-teens, but my personal opinion is that it falls just short. It’s a fun and often amusing time at the movies no doubt, with some well-executed set pieces and consistently beautiful visuals –  but it doesn’t quite have the invention or emotional heft of some of Pixar’s better efforts, and winds up feeling relatively throwaway as a result.

It doesn’t help that the story itself is a little too convoluted for its own good. There are several false starts before we’re eventually launched into the main thrust of the action, which sees Buzz team up with a ragtag bunch of characters – including the granddaughter of his former colleague and an escaped convict whose criminal past is kept deliberately ambiguous – as they hatch a plan to finally escape a planet he’d crash-landed on several years ago.