After years of uneven box office fortunes, Pixar has found its footing again. Toy Story 5 stormed into cinemas with the biggest opening weekend in the franchise’s history, earning more than $300 million worldwide after its June 19th debut.
The latest chapter in the beloved animated series collected more than $160 million domestically, alongside another $150 million-plus internationally, giving Disney and Pixar one of their strongest theatrical launches in years.
The film reunites Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Jessie and the rest of Andy’s iconic toys for a new adventure that pits them against an unlikely modern-day adversary: a tablet computer. It’s a premise that brings the franchise’s familiar emotional storytelling into the digital age while tapping into the generational appeal that has made Toy Story one of animation’s most enduring brands.
The blockbuster debut marks a significant turnaround for Pixar, whose theatrical releases have struggled to consistently replicate the studio’s pre-pandemic dominance. While sequels such as Inside Out 2 and The Incredibles 2 have surpassed the coveted $1 billion mark globally, recent originals and spin-offs – including Elio and Lightyear – failed to connect with audiences at the same level.
With a reported production budget of $250 million, Toy Story 5 still has ground to cover before becoming profitable. Hollywood’s biggest releases typically need to earn roughly twice their production budgets once marketing and distribution costs are factored in. Even so, Pixar’s biggest hits have historically cleared that threshold comfortably, with several films going on to triple their total investment.
The film’s debut also makes it the second-biggest global opening of the year, trailing only The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, which has already crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide and currently stands as 2026’s highest-grossing release.
Toy Story 5 | Official Trailer
The success arrives at a crucial moment for Disney. Since the COVID-19 pandemic reshaped moviegoing habits, theatrical box office revenues have remained below pre-2020 highs as audiences increasingly embraced streaming platforms such as Disney+ and Netflix. Even major franchise titles have found it harder to deliver the kind of blockbuster returns that once seemed inevitable. Disney’s The Mandalorian and Grogu, for example, has yet to recoup twice its reported $165 million production budget.
Few franchises, however, carry the cultural weight of Toy Story. Since Woody and Buzz first arrived in 1995, the series has generated more than $3 billion at the global box office while helping redefine modern animation. The original film revolutionised computer-generated filmmaking and transformed Pixar into one of Hollywood’s premier animation studios, laying the groundwork for decades of critical and commercial success.
More than three decades after audiences first met a pull-string cowboy and a space ranger convinced he could fly, Toy Story continues to prove that nostalgia – when paired with strong storytelling – remains one of Hollywood’s most valuable commodities.
Let us know your thoughts on this story over on CelebMix socials now!
