Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 23
Toy Story 5 Moves 30-Something Women to Tears as Jessie’s Return Rekindles 30 Years of Girlhood
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 23

Toy Story 5 Moves 30-Something Women to Tears as Jessie’s Return Rekindles 30 Years of Girlhood

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 23

Summary

  • Jessie’s discovery that Emily named her daughter after her became the film’s emotional peak for many millennial women, turning weekend screenings into reflections on motherhood, child-free choices and their own childhoods.
  • Thirty years after the franchise began, the sequel ties that nostalgia to present-day anxieties: Bonnie ditches old toys for a digital tablet to fit in, framing big tech and peer pressure as forces shaping girls’ confidence and friendships.
  • Bonnie’s sleepover fears, social awkwardness and search for belonging give the story its bridge between generations, while scenes of shared weirdness and play celebrate girlhood alongside its bruises.
  • Taylor Swift, 36, amplified that mood by unveiling a new song with a childhood cowgirl video, underscoring how the sequel taps a wider millennial fixation on revisiting pre-internet youth and measuring adult life against it.

Insights

As 'Toy Story 5' tackles screen time, is it selling nostalgia or a new parenting manual?
Why is a story about talking toys the perfect escape for a financially anxious generation?