Why is bo peep toy story 3




















Bo Peep and Buzz still having their Moving Buddies connection shows just how strong their friendship is. While watching Toy Story 3 , many fans were sad about Bo Peep's absence.

She was the favorite character of numerous people, so it was understandable to be upset over it. However, it might be for the best that she was omitted from the film. Near the end of the film, the toys are trapped in an incinerator and awaiting falling into a pit of fire.

If Bo Peep had been with them, she wouldn't have even made it that far. Because she's made of porcelain, the incinerator would've gotten to her quickly due to how hot it was.

Fortunately, Bo Peep wasn't there, and she got to live to play another day. Aside from her sheep, Bo Peep has another partner in the form of a tiny, adorable police officer. She helps her escape, and the two have been together ever since. Of the many new characters introduced in Toy Story 4 , Giggle is certainly one of the standouts. Some appearances of Bo Peep have her with a different actress. But for the most part, Bo Peep is played by Annie Potts. With over forty years of acting, it's safe to say that Bo Peep is played by a very talented actress.

He lost a bunch of his army men, from the look of things, and half of the first movie was only about how he lost his toys. Maybe not. I mean, it is possible. Maybe she got sick of never being played with and bailed, similar to how the army men peaced out in the beginning of Toy Story 3. No way.

If you know anything about the grand universe of Pixar, then you know that toys operate under strict, programmed directives to always please humans no matter what.

Unless your human is Sid. And Sunnyside is the first place she thought of to donate toys, so she might have donated Bo Peep and other favorites like Etch and Mr. Spell years before. If she was donated, then that means Lotso and the gang put her in the Caterpillar room. When traveling with the main characters, Bo could easily "shatter into a million pieces" whilst doing dangerous stunts. Due to being unable to find a believable spot in the story, Bo Peep only appears at the beginning and end of Toy Story 2.

Bo Peep was ultimately written out of Toy Story 3 , due to the fact Molly and Andy wouldn't want her anymore, and emblematic of the losses the toys have had over time. She also was written out due to the belief that Andy probably wouldn't have anything to say about her when he gives the other toys to Bonnie at the third film's end. Bo Peep is a very romantic and levelheaded toy. She has strong feelings for Woody, which causes her along with Slinky to give him the benefit of the doubt when he allegedly murders Buzz Lightyear, whom she clearly considers attractive as well, and consistently whispers to the wall her worries about where Woody could be.

Despite this, she still behaves like a free spirit. She only believes what she has witnessed for herself, such as when she looks into Lenny's visor and sees Buzz riding behind Woody aboard RC, while the rest of the toys immediately take her word for it. By the time she is moved to Molly's room, she becomes more of a leader amongst her toys as she is described by Woody to be the most capable of easing Molly's cries at night which often caused great dismay to everyone.

Since she parted ways with Andy, Bo has taken on a different point of view in life. As a lost toy, she never worries about being loved by a child and is open to see the world.

Bo, along with her sheep, is a porcelain figurine. She has painted blonde hair with three curls on the back, light vinyl skin, and tall. In the original two films, her outfit consisted of a pink bonnet with a white ribbon, a pink dress with a long, poofy, white skirt that featured pink polka dots, a blue jumpsuit under her dress with ruffles at the pant legs, and black Mary Jane shoes.

In the fourth film, she has an updated appearance: Her skin is fairer, and her eyes are wider. In the beginning flashback scene, her dress has the same appearance, but the colors are brighter, and her dress is looser for Bo to move more freely, indicating that the petticoats and hoop skirt that gave it its original appearance were removed. When becoming a lost toy, Bo is faded, and her skin, particularly around her face and arms, has been chipped.

Her remaining attire is now her blue jumpsuit with pink ribbon wrapped around it, Mary Jane shoes, white tape on her right bicep, purple tape on her left wrist, and a large, pink bow on her head to replace the bonnet. Andy has set up a stage and is portraying Bo Peep as a distressed shepherdess who is despaired when Mr.

Potato Head , One-Eyed Bart "robs" the bank. While holding her at "gunpoint", he tells her to be quiet or her sheep who are put on Andy's race track will get run over which horrifies her.

Bo then calls for help and Woody soon arrives to save the day yet again. Later, as Andy and Molly leave their bedroom, Woody tells everyone the coast is clear, causing every toy to spring to life. As Woody prepares an unplanned staff meeting, he is pulled away by Bo's crook. She kindly thanks him for saving her flock, and offers to get someone to watch her sheep, with the intention of spending time alone with Woody.

The cowboy nervously giggles in response, but Bo then reminds him that she's "only a couple of blocks away" as she walks back to her lamp. Bo impressed with Andy's new toy, Buzz Lightyear.

After Buzz Lightyear arrives in Andy's room, Bo is impressed by the space ranger like the other toys. Woody murmurs in jealousy to Bo how the other toys act as they've never seen a new toy before, but she defends them by saying that Buzz has more gadgets on him than a "Swiss army knife.

The action figure stands on the top of Andy's headboard and leaps off, landing on a ball, bouncing off of it to land on the racetrack, goes through the loop and gets caught on the model plane hanging on the ceiling, spins in circles, and lands back where he was, all with his eyes closed. Much to Woody's shock, the toys cheer in excitement, with Bo saying how "she just found her moving buddy".

Even after Woody is shoved to the side by Andy, who soon decorates his room with Buzz Lightyear paraphernalia and eventually writes his name on Buzz's boot, Bo still remains faithful to Woody and tells him she knows Andy is excited about Buzz but reminds him that he will always have a special place for the cowboy.

But Mr. Potato Head overhears this and jokes to them about how the only special place for Woody is in the attic, causing Woody to angrily storm over and confront Buzz. Soon, however, they hear a kid laughing maniacally outside.

The gang looks out the window to find Sid Phillips, Andy's neighbor, abusively playing with a Combat Carl toy in his backyard. After being informed by Rex that Sid tortures toys for his own pleasure, Buzz believes he should teach him a lesson. He is about to jump down from the window, but Bo restrains him with her crook, telling him to get down.

After watching Sid blow up the toy, Bo says that the sooner the Davis' move out, the better. That evening, after Buzz is accidentally knocked out the window, Bo Peep is horrified when Mr.

Potato Head blames Woody for the accident, and she tries to stop the toys from ambushing him, but they are forced to retreat when they hear Andy coming back to the room. As the Davis family leaves for the evening, the toys try and use the Barrel of Monkeys as a chain to grab Buzz not realizing Buzz grabbed onto the bumper of the family car as it drove off out the window with Bo's crook, but it's too short, and they've used the whole barrel.

That night, the toys are shocked when they hear from Andy that Woody has gone missing. Bill Desowitz. The Sheriff feels duty bound to find him, but the plot thickens when Woody is reunited with Bo. She enjoys being a lost toy on her own, and offers an opportunity for growth and change.

It would be unbelievable for her to be going through the same intense physical things the other toys went through without getting broken. Given our previous challenges, we made the decision to have Bo Peep be that toy; it killed two birds with one stone. And then the prologue changed: Rather than visualize the toys concocting their own play scenarios without Andy, it became a fantasy Western.



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