[link] is the WIP of this you may recognize. Finally done with it. All details other than Woody were intentionally left sketchy, since he's the focus of the piece.
After [link] , I had to make another one. Monochrome this time, and not using an angle we actually saw in the movie. Made it more painterly than the last one, so it doesn't just look like a screenshot.
I realized somewhere along the line that, in the incinerator scene, had they not been saved, Woody would've been the first to die, as he was the furthest down. Just thinking about what COULD have been puts a lump firmly in my throat. Thank goodness Pixar wasn't THAT evil.
Having to rewatch it for the sake of reference images made me realize that I will never be able to get through this scene without getting a lump in my throat at the very least!
Woody, Buzz Lightyear, and crew. It's the (soon to be) infamous incinerator scene. The inferno looks like the effing GATES OF HELL.
Everything pictured above (characters and Toy Story) all belong to the amazing folks at Pixar and Disney, people. Not me. Duh.
I was so surprised when that scene came up. Everyone in the theater was silent. It also made me nearly shed a tear, and when I rewatched it on DVD, I cried HARD.
The only reason I wasn't crying when I saw this was because I knew in my gut they would make it out ... but not knowing how scared the living crap out of me OwO
Hello! I LOVE YOU ARTWORK! I was hoping that I could use it in my documentary. Its about whether or not technology has a supplemental or detrimental effect on animated films, specifically whether it cheapens or improves animation quality, story, and overall effect on viewers. Your picture illustrates, no, conveys the "lump in the throat" mood and how powerful animation can be on the viewer. It would make a great addition and I will be sure to credit you in, well, the credits. The documentary would be shown at my school (as the assignment that it is) and uploaded to YouTube where my family and friends can view it, such as those that live far away from me. Other than that, this is a really, really great work of art.
my mom completely ruined this scene for me by saying that it reminded her of how the jewish survivors described the death camps...sorry if i just ruined it for everyone else [link]
The scene in this movie was so emotional that I had to blink a million times over and over again to keep from crying. Don't let go, Buzz. Don't let go...
It would make a great addition and I will be sure to credit you in, well, the credits.
The documentary would be shown at my school (as the assignment that it is) and uploaded to YouTube where my family and friends can view it, such as those that live far away from me.
Other than that, this is a really, really great work of art.