Toy Story 3 had long been a bone of contention between Pixar and Disney. Disney wanted to make quick money making third sequel, as Disney owned all the rights to the first five Pixar films. Lasseter was horrified at the idea of his characters being destroyed by cheap Disney sequels. During the contentious phase between Disney and Pixar, Eisner, then the CEO of Disney, threated to make the sequels to Toy Story and Finding Nemo deliberately aweful of Pixar left the Disney/Pixar partnership. A small studio was created by Eisner just to make Pixar sequels, this studio was later disbanded when Pixar and Disney merged. The merged prompted talks of making Toy Story 3, but a sequel that went along with Pixar’s values of creating excellent an entertaining material. During the summer of 2010, the long awaited final sequel came out to remarkable critical acclaim. The movie was a roaring success critically and financially, having a near perfect score on Rotten Tomatoes. It was the first Pixar movie to gross over 1 billion dollars. It was nominated for Best Feature Film, and won Best Animated Film and Best Original Song. The reason for its remarkable success was its beautiful and poignant story. Although still technically a children’s movie, the film spoke especially to the first generation that had grown up with Pixar. It’s teary ending touched the hearts of millions of teenagers and young adults saying goodbye to childhood as Andy sorrowfully said goodbye to his toys. The film resonated with the entire population, not just a certain age demographic. Whether its heartwrenching tale of toys and humans growing up and moving on will resound as strongly in the future years has yet to be seen. But there is no denying it dominated the box office and people’s minds and hearts for a summer