Toy Story 3

Corrected entry: While in the end credits when Trixie and Rex play on the computer, Trixie looks green. In several shots she is blue.

Jeffy

Correction: Trixie is blue. She looks green behind the computer because of the light of the screen.

lionhead

Corrected entry: When Woody goes back to Sunnyside Daycare to save his friends, he goes from the butterfly room, where they were first put, to the caterpillar room. Woody had left his friends before they were transferred to the caterpillar room, so he would have no way of knowing that they were not in the original butterfly room where he had left them.

Disney-Freak

Correction: Woody is with his friends in the caterpillar room taking the tour of it before he left with buzz and the gang. He escapes from the caterpillar room when bonnie's mom comes to find her. That is how he knows where they are.

Corrected entry: When Rex resets Buzz, the battery cover is off. Then Buzz jumps up and starts speaking Spanish, but when he is talking to Jesse his battery cover is back on.

Correction: When Buzz suddenly jumps up, the force from his jump snaps the back cover back into place. It's likely that the hinge on Buzz's back cover is well-worn (even if Andy took great care of his toys) from exchanging batteries so much that the hinge is a lot looser than in the original Toy Story or Toy Story 2.

Correction: There is no rule saying that the toy's faces must return to their exact position when people are around (i.e., when they have to freeze in position). Woody's expression is always a closed-mouth smile when frozen in place with only slight changes in his facial expression. In a universe where toys can come to life it must be acceptable that there can be changes in their configurations when they freeze in place.

BocaDavie

Corrected entry: When Buzz is reset by the other toys in the Sunnyside Daycare, it is implied that he was made in Spain, hence the Spanish language he starts speaking in. But in the first Toy Story, when he realizes that he's just a toy and not a real space ranger, he checks his arm, which reads, "Made In Taiwan." So instead of Spanish, he should have spoken either Mandarin Chinese, Taiwanese (Minnan dialect) or Hakka (Chinese dialect), which are the languages spoken there.

BX718

Correction: The fact that he has a Spanish mode doesn't mean he was made in a Spanish speaking country, it just means that the manufacturers knew their target buyers included Spanish speaking people. Most toys are now made in china but you don't see many of them with a mandarin setting.

Disney-Freak

Corrected entry: When the toys return to Andy's 'attic' box in the end and he decides to take them to Bonnie, he never questions how his toys have gotten from the garbage bag to the box, despite the fact that the garbage man should have taken the bag away long ago since Andy's mom placed it on the curb.

Correction: He never knows for certain what happened to the toys. He probably assumes his mom found the toys and put them in the box for him. Just like he probably assumes the note on the post-it was written by his mom.

JC Fernandez

Incorrect. Mrs Potato Head had discovered that she could see Andy through her other eye at home. You can actually make it out that Andy is looking for the bag of toys and asking his mother where they are. We then see her realise what she had done, so now Andy thinks they were binned. He doesn't react because he is just happy to know they weren't destroyed. However, it is a similar mystery to the one in Toy Story 1 when Andy isn't baffled that the toys who have been missing for a day suddenly appear next to him in the car.

Corrected entry: In the first Toy Story Andy's room is sky blue with clouds. At the end of the film he has moved into his new house and we see that his room is a green shade. In Toy Story 3 his room is once again blue with clouds, a little childish for a teenager going to college.

Seven_Thirteen

Correction: They never say when his room was repainted, it was apparently done when he was a child and never repainted when he grew up. At the beginning of Toy Story 3 they show a videotape of him when he was a child, playing with the characters from Toy Story 2 in his blue bedroom.

BocaDavie

Corrected entry: In the bedroom, Andy's dog Buster flops down on top of Woody. When Woody gets out from under the dog, Woody's cowboy hat is missing. In the very next shot, as Woody runs to the window, his hat is back on his head.

Correction: The hat was under the dog; he grabs it when the dog rolls off him.

BocaDavie

Corrected entry: When we are first introduced to Chuckles the Clown, he is sitting on a windowsill with no hair. After he recounts his story, he has hair sprouting above his ears.

Wollybutt

Correction: The hair is there the whole time. They do a fade between present Chuckles and past Chuckles to juxtapose the differences; limp, ragged hair becoming perky and sleek again.

Phixius

Corrected entry: In the scene where they are at the dump and going through the tunnel towards the furnace, there is a huge magnet above them collecting all metal, the first toy to go is Slinky because of his metal spring, once they get past the shredder all the toys let go of the metal materials and fall down. How does Slinky fall down while the strong magnet is still holding onto all things metal and he is made of a lot of metal?

Correction: The other toys weighed him down. The director himself confirmed this.

Corrected entry: Barbie dresses up in Ken's astronaut outfit to get Buzz Lightyear's instruction manual from the Bookworm. We don't see her ask for the manual, but the Bookworm falls for the ruse, believing her to be Ken, and hands over the manual. There's no way Barbie could have asked for the instructions, though, because as soon as she opened her mouth, the Bookworm would have known that she wasn't really Ken.

Correction: Barbie dressed as an astronaut for a reason. Since "he" was an astronaut, that meant to the Bookworm that "he" had to communicate without words, so "he" most likely used poses to let the Bookworm know what "he" was looking for.

I don't see how that makes sense. Does the Bookworm know all of Ken's outfits? Unlikely. And how would Barbie use poses to let the Bookworm know what she wants exactly? Surely that would just raise suspicion.

No, it wouldn't. First off, Ken is a dress-up doll, so him having a lot of outfits wouldn't be unusual in the first place, even if nobody has seen them all. Second, have you never heard of sign language, or maybe Barbie writing something down?

Corrected entry: In the first film, Woody fends of Sid's mutant toys with Buzz's karate-chop mode, which is activated by pushing the purple button on the back of Buzz's jetpack. This film shows that his jetpack is his battery compartment and there are no physical connections between the purple karate chop button and the rest of Buzz's body that would allow it to control his karate chop.

Vader47000

Correction: The button on the pack depresses to press another button embedded in Buzz's actual back.

Phixius

Deliberate mistake: When the bear pulls Woody into the garbage bin after the other toys have crossed over, his hat is not pulled off when his body is squeezed under the lid when going down. (01:15:35)

Some_Old_Acct

More mistakes in Toy Story 3

Ken: And this... Well, this is where I live. It's got a disco, it's got a dune buggy, and a whole room just for trying on clothes.

More quotes from Toy Story 3

Trivia: At the Sunnyside Day Care there is a wooden version of Lighting McQueen rolling around on the floor. In the sandbox is the Luxor Ball, the yellow ball with the red star and blue stripe. There is also the Pizza Planet truck.

Chris Skoglund

More trivia for Toy Story 3

Answer: The role has been taken over by Blake Clark.

Tailkinker

More questions & answers from Toy Story 3

Join the mailing list

Separate from membership, this is to get updates about mistakes in recent releases. Addresses are not passed on to any third party, and are used solely for direct communication from this site. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Check out the mistake & trivia books, on Kindle and in paperback.