Pop Culture Happy Hour - Best Pixar Movies, Ranked
Episode Date: June 24, 2025It's been nearly 30 years since Toy Story kicked off a historic run of animated films. So now seemed like a good time to discuss the best of the best — YOUR picks for the greatest Pixar films of all... time. Thousands of you voted, and we've got the results. To see our listener's full ranking of Pixar film, check out the list on Letterboxd - at letterboxd.com/nprpopcultureTo access bonus episodes and sponsor-free listening for Pop Culture Happy Hour, subscribe to Pop Culture Happy Hour+ at plus.npr.org/happy See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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It's been nearly 30 years since Toy Story kicked off a historic run of animated films.
So now seemed like a good time to discuss the best of the best, your picks for the greatest Pixar films of all time.
I'm Stephen Thompson, and today we are ranking the best Pixar movies on NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour.
Here to reveal the list is my co-host, Aisha Harris. Hey, Aisha.
Mike Wazzowski. I mean, hey, Stephen.
You will forever be silly to my Mike.
I love it. Thank you, Steve.
So for those of you who didn't vote in our Pixar poll, a quick bit of background, we gave
listeners a list of Pixar features, 28 of them and all prior to the release of Elio, and the
chance to pick no more than three of them, which, given the number of classic films, was a
tough task. I personally counted seven films I wanted to put in my top three. So with that
in mind, let's get to your top five, which, thanks to a one.
well-placed tie is actually a top six.
Aisha hit us with the first of our two fifth-place finishers.
Woo-hoo.
I was very happy to see, especially one of these,
eke their way in in this tie here.
The first is Toy Story, of course,
the original version, which came out in 1995,
the movie that started it all.
You!
You weren't the real buzz light.
You're an accent figure.
You are a child's play thing.
You are a sad,
strange little man, and you have my pity.
And then tied with Toy Story, we have my personal favorite.
The movie I think is actually the best Pixar, which is Coco.
One of those seven films in my top three, for sure.
I am so happy to see Coco in here especially.
I was not surprised to see Toy Story.
I figured one of them at least was going to make it in here.
Look, this is the original.
It's the one that a lot of people have a lot of nostalgia for.
But Coco, I think it might be the best.
Pixar personally. You know, this is a movie that came out in 2017, so it's later,
later era Pixar. But to me, it kind of has all the ingredients that we, or at least I've come
to love about Pixar movies. It's about family, of course, but it's a little bit more complicated
than that. You've got Miguel voiced by Anthony Gonzalez, who finds himself in the land of the dead
and uncovers secrets and hidden meeting about his family. And it's about sort of the stories we tell
ourselves and the ways that those things reverberate throughout generations.
And it's beautiful.
The music's great.
And that last scene,
Remember me, though I have to travel for, remember each time you appear a sad guitar.
One of the last scenes with Mama Coco.
Oh, my goodness.
That scene, especially where Miguel is singing, Remember Me to her, and her recognizing it
and being lucid for that brief amount of time.
I rewatched it recently.
Still a gut punch.
I was bawling.
I was bawling.
Yeah.
These are two very different films, and they are two, I think, masterpieces.
Yeah.
Toy Story gets a ton of credit for being kind of the movie that started at all.
And rightfully so, I don't think it gets enough credit for being the bedrock on which some of the best sequels ever made were built.
Yeah.
You know, when we talk about this poll, you know, this is not a super scientific.
poll. We gave everybody three votes. The Toy Story series is at a significant disadvantage compared to other
sequelized Pixar movies because it has multiple films that could credibly be considered among the best
animated films of all time. And so Toy Story One is splitting the vote with Toy Story 2, which is actually
my favorite Toy Story movie. Same. Me too. Oh, yay. I was raised by collectors. So that film really
resonated with me. Toy Story 3
is a deep sentimental favorite
for a lot of people. Where these
movies come out in the span of your
life ends up being very significant to
whether they're your favorite. I think
Toy Story is a masterful film.
It is funny. It is warm.
Excuse me. I think the word you're searching
for is Space Ranger.
The word I'm searching for, I can't
say because there's preschool toys
press. It is laying all this
groundwork for a bunch of magnificent
sequels. In the case
of Coco, and Coco is getting a sequel. I don't know if it really needs a sequel. It does not.
It does not. But talk about an emotional gut punch. And we're going to talk about a few other
major, like, emotionally heavyweight Pixar films. Coco is talking about death and family and
remembrance and the power of music and the way memory gets distorted and the way memory can form
myth. There's so many big ideas in this film, but also, Aisha, I don't think you've even
mentioned how gorgeous. Oh, my goodness. Coco is to look at. The land of the dead is just such a
visual feast. The fact that it's like this urban metropolis that is very vibrant and electric
and the neon colors and just the way that everything looks, like it is beautiful. And even the
skeletons that are taken from, you know, the classic Day of the Dead imagery, they have so much
personality and warmth. They're dead characters, but they're alive. I think it's one of the most
gorgeous, gorgeous Pixar movies ever. It's just, it's top tier. It really is. And it also
really felt lived in. It felt like it took this world seriously and made something that honored
that tradition instead of just like using it for storytelling beats. I absolutely agree. And this
is one of the movies that I always hold up when I'm talking about, you know, Disney slash
Pixar remaking their films or reimagining their films and trying to like shoehorn in
diversity or trying to correct for their past sins. And I'm just like, Coco was able to do that
by creating a new, completely original story while also being very respectful and very
thoughtful about the way it employed all of that. So yeah, I'm just so happy to see both Toy Story
and Coco make their way into this top five or top six.
They are both correct answers.
Yes.
Hey, speaking of emotional gut punches, what do you got for number four?
I feel as though listeners probably will not be at all surprised that this is in the top five,
often called one of the greatest opening sequences of a movie, especially an animated
movie of all time, I think rightfully so.
And that is up.
Of course, that is the 2009 film starring Ed Asner.
as Carl, the old crotchety man who is harboring a lot of just grief for the loss of his wife.
I always come back to that opening sequence, but I also think the rest of the movie is fun.
Like, it's hard. It's really hard. And we're going to talk about another movie. I think people
will be able to guess. That also has an opening sequence that's very hard to live up to.
I think this movie does a really good job of keeping the story interesting, even if it can't
quite live up to the heights of the opening. But man, that opening sequence, it's,
I don't know. I don't have any words for it. It's just, it's, it still moves me.
Aisha, I rewatched the sequence the other day. And of course, just bawled all over the place the way you did watching Coco.
And what struck me rewatching it, you know, the way it lays out, you get this kind of newsreel with like a bunch of exposition.
And then you have eight and a half minutes, eight and a half perfectly scored minutes.
You know, it starts out with dialogue and eventually goes wordless.
And you are just seeing the playing out of these two inner.
intertwined lives. But amid all of that emotion, it is really important to note, this is a fun
movie. This is a funny movie. Squirrel!
My master made me this collar. He is a good and smart master, and he made me this collar
so that I may talk. Squirrel! The character of Doug, the sweet comic relief talking dog,
that understands dogs in a way that I think very few movies do.
There is a sweetness to this film.
There's some deep messaging in this film, not only about grief, but about how you
honor your loved ones by the way that you live your life going forward that I found enormously
powerful.
Genuinely, when it came out, and for a long time thereafter, I would say it was one of
my favorite movies, period.
Yeah.
I really deeply love this film.
And think about how novel and what a huge risk it was to make inherently a kid-friendly
type animated movie about an old person.
Yes.
And an old person as an action hero, an old person with an interior life, an old person with
life ahead of him, an old person paying tribute to a loved one who has died, who is also
a deeply fleshed out, warm character that you care about who has a presence throughout
this film.
This movie is such an object lesson in the fact that, like, you can make it.
kids movie about almost anything if you have enough of an appreciation for the characters that
you're talking about.
Aisha, up is not my number one favorite Pixar movie, but it is one that I feel really,
really passionately about.
And I'm so glad it made this list.
Part of that sequence is we see that Carl and his wife were unable to conceive.
And it was devastating for them.
But they still found ways to find happiness together.
and I love that aspect of it.
And then it connects to, you know, the present day when he meets Russell, you know, and in a way, adopts a child.
Russell, for assisting the elderly and for performing above and beyond the call of duty,
I would like to award you the highest honor I can bestow the Ellie Pedge.
I concur, it's not necessarily my go-to Pixar movie, but everyone's a moment.
a while, it is nice to revisit it and nice to be surprised again at how masterful this movie is.
So I can't be mad about being in this top five.
No, not the Pixar movie with the best grasp of physics, but I'll allow it.
It's okay.
All right, Aisha hit us with number three.
All right.
Well, number three is actually a movie that I realized I had not seen in like well over a decade, at least, in part because,
when it originally came out, I probably watched it so, so many times.
It was just imprinted in my brain.
That is Finding Nemo from 2003.
Albert Brooks voices Marlin, a clownfish, who, again, talking about death and losing family
members, he loses his wife.
I guess, are they what married?
I don't know.
He loses his partner.
They're fish.
I don't know.
I don't know that there was a legal ceremony.
Maybe not, maybe not.
But he loses her, but also all of their eggs that have.
not yet hatched, except for one. And that is Nemo, voiced by Alexander Gold. It's a story about
overprotected parenting, fear of your child's safety. Okay, I was right. You know what?
We'll start school in a year or two. No, Dad. Just because you're scared of you...
Clearly you're not ready and you're not coming back until you are. You think you could do these things,
but you just can't, Nemo. That, I think, is sort of a cross-generational appeal that, like, you can
kind of see in the earlier movies. Monsters Inc. also has a little bit of that as well. But I
I feel like this is the first movie where people were like, yes, Pixar has tapped into this.
This is for the parents just as much as it is for the kids.
If not more, to be honest.
If not more so.
I'm happy to see it here.
It holds up.
It really does.
It's got a great cast.
And once again, Aisha, you haven't yet acknowledged one of the things that really jumps out of this film, which is how it looks.
It's beautiful.
Yes, it is beautiful.
Gather around grandpa's knee.
They'll tell you about what it was like to walk into a Costco or any store that.
that sold TVs for about five years after Finding Nemo came out.
This was what you would see.
Because if you wanted to show how beautiful a TV was capable of being,
you would look at Finding Nemo to get that sense.
This deep blue color palette, but then these exquisite colors on top of it,
it's worth noting.
Ellen DeGeneres got Oscar buzz.
Yes, I remember this.
For her performance as Dory.
And it was real Oscar buzz.
She didn't get nominated, but it was talking about.
talked about as why not?
Why wouldn't you?
I shall call him Squishy and he shall be mine and he shall be my squishy.
Come here, Squishy.
Come here, little squishy.
Dory, that's a jellyfish.
Bad squishy.
Alverfrox is so good in this and bringing so much pathos.
I'm going to come back to this point at least one more time in this conversation.
Where you are in your life when you receive a Pixar movie is going to
be very important to how you perceive it and how you rank it.
And Finding Nemo came out in 2003 in between my first child and my second child.
And thinking about that feeling of needing to protect a fragile being that is your responsibility,
this movie hit very hard.
And it hit hard at the same time that it has this goofy surfer stoner turtle character.
and the emotional support group for sharks who don't want to feed.
I now a nice shark, not a mindless eating machine.
If I am to change this image, I must first change myself.
Fish are friends, not food.
So many sweet, funny characters.
There's just a little fish where they're describing their different maladies,
and one of them just says, I'm obnoxious.
I'm obnoxious.
Should have been a greater catchphrase.
This film gave and gave, I don't think it's aged a day.
I love it.
Yeah, just keep swimming.
Just keep swimming.
Oh, my God.
Part of my vocabulary for a very long time.
When life gets you down, you know what you got to do?
I don't want to know what you got to do.
Just keep swimming.
Just keep swimming.
Just keep swimming.
Swimming.
What do we do?
That's actually really good advice.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, yes.
Finding Nemo, so good.
I was 15 when this movie came out.
So, you know, I was not.
a child, but I was also not, I don't know, too cool.
If you're too cool for Pixar, don't hang out with me.
Yeah, that's true.
Aisha, I think you and I are of one mind on this one.
I'm very intrigued to discuss it with you.
Number two is...
All right, well, we might have to rein on some parades.
Number two is no surprise, I think.
No, I'm not surprised by it, Wally.
Yes, it's Wally.
Let's just get right to it.
This is the other movie, I think, when people think of Pixar and
think of great opening sequences. This is the movie everyone thinks of. Of course, you've got Wally
voiced by Ben Burt. He is the last remaining robots on Earth after everyone, all the humans have
left because climate change, they ruin the Earth. It's very poignant. And then, of course,
you have this amazing sequence of just being with this robot. And he has sentience. And it's
just beautiful. And then you get the rest of the movie when we go to see the humans. And
it's such a precipitous drop, in my opinion. To be fair, to this film, unlike Up, what people
talk about when they talk about Up is often a sequence of about eight and a half minutes.
Sure. In the case of Wally, it is a much longer sequence. Yes. It basically plays out as a
masterful, silent film. Mostly wordless. Largely wordless in which this little robot,
kind of moves through the world and is like still kind of is very dutiful. It's still like doing the
tasks it was assigned to do. But it has such life and such personality.
Wally. It's a short film. It's an excellent short film. If it were just a short film,
it would be like one of the best short films I've ever seen. I do not want to reign on the
parade of how brilliant that movie is until the moment the rocket takes off with a little robot
attached to it.
And as soon as it goes into space, it becomes not only a fairly wrote Pixar Quest epic,
but it is also, Aisha, it is so deeply cynical about humanity in ways that I found shocking.
It's not just like I can't handle the fact that it's this scathing indictment of
humanity's worst excesses. It's a more cynical than accurate view of what humanity is capable of.
Well, also so much of that, the criticism coming from within the movie hinges on this idea that, like, being fat is like the worst thing in the world.
It's very kind of queasy to watch, to be honest.
Yeah, and it's played for laughs. But it's also just like, it's also, you know, I mentioned the physics and up.
The ending is also a complete cop out.
Like, the world is not suddenly inhabitable.
It's just, to me, it's like they made a perfect short film,
but then grafted a best kind of C-plus Pixar quest to the back of it,
and it just loses everything that's so magical about how it starts.
Yeah, I mean, here's the thing.
Obviously, a lot of people disagree with us because it's at number.
I know we're going to get so much.
It's at number two.
And it is the first Pixar movie to be entered into the Criterion Collection.
So like, it has its fans and it has its defenders.
In some ways, it's the artiest Pixar movie, right?
It is the artiest in the criterion fanboy film bro way.
And I say this as someone who can absolutely play into all of those stereotypes.
You can out film bro a lot of people.
Sure.
And yes.
And look, I can hear them, our listeners typing now and being like, how dare you last name?
Yeah. But I also, I understand why people gravitate toward it.
I think there are other movies that they may not come to the highest height of Wally,
but as a full picture execution of a story, you're not going to convince me that Wally is one of the top tier Pixar's outside of that opening sequence.
Sorry, not sorry.
All right. Well, that's Wally at number two.
After the break, we will reveal the number one pick, which, by the way, is my favorite.
Picksar movie. So stick around.
Welcome back, Aisha. I am so happy with our listeners right now because they picked my favorite
Pixar movie at number one. The good dinosaur. The good dinosaur. Give us the picture.
It is, of course, inside out. Do you ever look at someone and wonder, what is going on inside
their head? Well, I know. I know Riley's head. I mean,
Duh, right? Even if it's not my personal favorite, it's definitely in my top three. And it is definitely, I remember when this movie came out in 2015, it made so many critics, top 10 lists. But it wasn't just a critical hit. It was every audience person I talked to connected with it. And I think back to watching that movie and feeling as though I had been seen. I could remember.
being that age, the same age as Riley, and feeling all those feelings. And talk about
execution and big swing. Like, you know, this is, this is not, it's not necessarily a wholly
original concept when it came out of a lot of people talked about Herman's head and how this
sort of concept has been explored before. But to do so in a movie directed at children and this
idea of what happens when you're no longer an innocent child who,
may be shielded from the world in that first encounter with all these other feelings and Amy
Polar as joy and trying to protect that. She's kind of the Woody of this movie. She is the one
who's trying to keep the gang together. I get it. You guys have concerns, but we've been through
worse. Tell you what, let's make a list of all the things Riley should be happy about.
She's trying to hold everything together. But she can't and learning to accept that in the same way
that Woody has to learn to accept that Andy cannot always be his person.
Oh, man.
And then, of course, I will say, it looks beautiful.
It's gorgeous.
Amazing.
But also, Bing, Bong.
Yeah.
We have not said the words Richard Kind in the Richard Kindiest performance ever committed to screen.
Yes.
Shape-wise, I'm part cat, part elephant, part dolphin.
Dolphin?
You got to remember when Riley was three animals were all the wrong.
Rage, the cow goes moo, the horse goes nay.
That's all people talked about that.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, Bing Bong.
Just the idea of losing that creative spark, that imagination, the imaginary front, like,
oh, my goodness.
That sense of what you let go when you grow up, that the sense of imagination that you
are not going to be able to access again, and creating a sense of melancholy in a young
audience that isn't just like making them sad to make them sad.
It's making them sad in ways that.
introduce them to the workings of their brain. And we haven't mentioned Phyllis Smith from the office
as sadness. Part of what is so great about Inside Out is it's not just about finding balance among
our different emotions. It's about finding strength from our different emotions. It's finding
strength from darkness. It's finding strength from sadness. It's understanding that all of these
things have to work together and they're all there to regulate something. They're all there to make
our brains work in the best possible way.
I just think, like, what an incredibly valuable lesson this film put out there,
kind of like Finding Nemo not only for kids, but also for their parents.
You need me to be happy, but my hockey team, please don't be mad.
I took my 11-year-old daughter to the screening in 2015 and was an absolute rack.
And I really felt like we were sitting there understanding each other a little bit.
And so this movie came out at a perfect time in my life, a perfect time in her life.
I think it is an absolute masterpiece.
There is one scene in this film I hate.
I know we all know.
We've talked about it many times.
But please remind listeners who may not know for this is going.
At one point, we get the parents' emotions.
The mom's emotions are like a panel on the view,
and dad's emotions are just trying to watch the hockey game.
Uh-oh, she's looking at us.
What did she say?
What?
Oh, sorry, sir.
No one was listening.
Is it garbage night?
We left the toilet seat up.
What?
What is it, woman?
What?
He's making that...
So irritating.
Stephen tapping into his disgust.
Yes, it did.
My disgust.
My little disgust goblin got very, very, very sick during that scene.
But look, it delighted a lot of people.
I'm not here to yuck anybody's yum.
That scene just made me very mad.
It's like two minutes I would have excised from what was otherwise to me a perfect film.
Yes.
So those are the six top vote getters.
I'm guessing just in terms of sheer odds that there is a very strong possibility that we did not get to your favorite Pixar movie to
day. I mean, the Incredibles and Monsters, Inc. were in the top 10, but not the top five.
Ratatoui didn't quite make the cut. There are some other truly great Pixar movies that did not
make the cut. I was sad not to see Turning Red, which is one of my favorite Pixar movies.
Same, same. We have the full list over on our letterboxed page. You can find that at letterboxed.com
slash NPR pop culture. We'll have a link to that in our episode description so you can kind of pour over
what our listeners did and didn't get right.
And next month, just for our pop culture happy hour plus supporters,
Aisha, you and I are going to be talking about the movies that ranked at the bottom of the list,
including the movie that got zero votes.
We have more Pixar Hot Takes for real.
You don't want to miss that.
Sign up now at plus.npr.org slash happy hour or visit the link in our show notes.
That brings us to the end of our hands.
show, Aisha Harris. Thanks so much for being here. You have saved our lives. We are eternally grateful.
Ah, thank you, Stephen. This episode was produced by Liz Metzker, Hufsofathema, and Mike Katzif,
and edited by our showrunner, Jessica Reedy. Hello, Kamin provides our theme music. Thank you for
listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. I'm Stephen Thompson, and we will see you all next time.
