Toy Story 3 is a 3D computer animated American cartoon produced in 2010. It is the third film in the Toy Story series. It was released by Walt Disney Pictures and created by Pixar Animation Studios. The director was Lee Unkrich. It became Pixar's highest grossing film in the North American box office, surpassing Finding Nemo. It received five Academy Award nominations and won the Best Animated Feature Film and the Best Original Song award in 2011.
Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Joan Cusack, Don Rickles and many others dubbed the voices of the characters in this film. Some new characters were dubbed by Ned Beatty, Timothy Dalton, Kristen Schaal and others.
The plot mainly focuses on the toys Woody, Buzz Lightyear and their friends. Andy, a seventeen year old college student, owns these toys. He has not been playing with his toys for years. So he decides to take Woody to college and stores the rest of them in a trash bag in the attic. However, Andy's mother throws the toys out accidentally. Woody wants to explain to the toys that they have not been abandoned but they refuse to listen. The toys escape and decide to climb into a donation box for the Sunnyside Daycare Centre. As the story continues, Woody finds the other toys, which have escaped and keeps them. In the process, Woody makes friendship with Bonnie, who is Andy's friend.
During the nineteenth century, the mechanization of farming and the fencing of range land opened the agricultural heart of North America to intensive development. As the natural geographic center of this region, Chicago became the crossroads of a vast transportation network. The great waterway systems of the Mississippi valley and the Great Lakes were linked in Chicago in 1847, when the Illinois- Michinga Canal was opened to traffic. Within the next year, rail lines began to operate trains to and from the city. The rise of agricultural activity demanded facilities for the storage and milling of grain, the slaughtering of cattle, and the processing and shipment of meat. The manufacture of farm machinery branched out into the basic metal- fabricating and woodworking industries. This soon attracted banks and other financial instiutions. Four years after the end of the Civil War, Chicago was already established as the focal point of the largest system of inland waterways in the world and the hub of a rail network that extended to the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts. The productive potential of the city was unparalleled, and the pace of its industrial expansion reached explosive proportions.
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