He is seen wearing a blue baseball t-shirt with white sleeves and a darker blue border, blue jeans, and black converse sneakers. In the flashbacks at the beginning of Toy Story 4, Andy appears as a kid again, but a few years older. In the end, he wears a blue dress shirt with a white undershirt, but his jeans and sneakers remain. He now wears a blue t-shirt with darker blue trim, blue jeans, and gray and brown sneakers. In Toy Story 3, Andy, now a teenager, has developed freckles and grew out his hair into messy bangs. When he returns from Cowboy Camp, he wears a dark green t-shirt with gray cargo shorts and the same color amount of sneakers. In the first part of Toy Story 2, he wears a white t-shirt with the bull-headed logo of Triple-R Ranch, dark blue cargo shorts, and grayish-blue sneakers. His first set is yellow with a cowboy on the shirt, and the other is blue with Buzz Lightyear on the shirt. They both consist of white short-sleeved raglan shirts with colored sleeves, shorts, and white socks. However, He wears his original outfit in a shot where he sadly leaves his old room holding his hat and Buzz's box, but this could either be an error, or he slept in those clothes. On moving day, he wears a light blue t-shirt with light brown shorts. When he goes to Pizza Planet, he wears a purple polo shirt but keeps his blue shorts. At the beginning of Toy Story, he wears a green t-shirt with a cowboy playing the guitar in the top right corner, blue shorts, white socks, and white sneakers with blue laces. In the first two movies, he wore a red cowboy hat, which he stopped wearing prior to Toy Story 3. The younger Luckey in interviews has claimed he wasn't aware that he was the namesake of the character, stating in Animation magazine that he believed it to be an urban legend and that he had assumed the character to have been named after Pixar animator Andrew Stanton.Īndy has fair skin, brown hair, and blue eyes. Andy was ultimately named after Andy Luckey, the son of legendary animator Bud Luckey, Pixar's fifth employee, and the creator of Woody. According to Toy Story producer Ralph Guggenheim, John Lasseter, and the story team for Toy Story reviewed the names of Pixar employees' children looking for the right name for Woody's owner.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |