Current:Home > News'Inside Out 2' review: The battle between Joy, Anxiety feels very real in profound sequel -AssetScope
'Inside Out 2' review: The battle between Joy, Anxiety feels very real in profound sequel
View
Date:2025-04-27 23:06:40
For teens, those who aren't yet teens, and anyone who was once a teen, the Pixar sequel “Inside Out 2” hits like an amusing, profound wrecking ball.
The original animated 2015 comedy “Inside Out” took audiences into young girl Riley’s complex mind and showcased a bevy of colorful emotions trying to keep it together for the kid’s sake, crafting an uncannily relatable movie in the process. Directed by Kelsey Mann, the next chapter (★★★½ out of four; rated PG; in theaters Friday) grows up alongside the newly minted teen and imagines the internal struggle, for all of us, when anxiety takes control.
The first "Inside Out" ended with Riley turning 12, and the sequel catches up with her (now voiced by Kensington Tallman) – as well as her core emotions Joy (Amy Poehler), Anger (Lewis Black), Sadness (Phyllis Smith), Fear (Tony Hale) and Disgust (Liza Lapira) – a year later. Riley has gone through a growth spurt, got braces (Disgust must have loved that day) and two besties, plus is a hockey star.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
The high school coach (Yvette Nicole Brown) sees her play and invites her to a skills camp – do well there and she could be playing as a freshman beside her super-cool idol Val Ortiz (Lilimar). The night before, however, Riley’s mind is thrown into disarray when Joy and Co. notice the red “puberty” button flashing and a demolition crew arrives to make way for new emotions. With frizzy hair and big plans to change things around, Anxiety (Maya Hawke) is the leader of this bunch that also includes precocious Envy (Ayo Edebiri), disinterested Ennui (Adele Exarchopoulos) – or, as she calls herself, “the boredom” – and painfully shy Embarrassment (Paul Walter Hauser).
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
The major friction within the first movie – Joy needing to find a way to deal with Sadness – seems small potatoes compared to a battle over Riley's entire belief system. As the girl is forced to choose between hanging with her friends or making new ones like Val, Anxiety pulls a coup, ditching the conflicted youngster's Sense of Self and exiling Joy's old emotions to the back of Riley’s mind with a mountain of bad memories.
“Inside Out 2” frontloads the funny bits and then wallops you in the final act, which ambitiously depicts the desperate hopelessness when anxiety has a hold and won’t let go. (“I don’t know how to stop Anxiety," Joy says, one of the truest things you’ll ever hear in an animated fantasy.)
The middle is where it loses focus, as Joy’s group goes on a mission to set Riley right before it’s too late. The original movie took a similar tack but did it better, and the sequel misses a real chance to flesh out the intriguing new emotions more. Aside from Anxiety, a truly inspired Disney antagonist, they feel more like side characters than Anger, Fear, Disgust and Sadness did in the first outing.
The way these movies artfully create a connection between real life and a fantastical inner existence is still top notch. Every parent of a tween or teenager will feel seen via a construction sign that reads “Puberty is messy” and get a kick out of Mount Crushmore, part of a revamped Imagination Land. And while there’s no Bing Bong around this time, the introduction of preschool cartoon canine Bloofy (Ron Funches) and the scene-stealing Nostalgia (June Squibb) showcase that signature “Inside Out” cleverness in its personalities.
Pixar has rightfully taken knocks for sequels and prequels that don’t hold up to the beloved originals. Recent films like “Turning Red,” “Luca” and “Soul” have the novel spark that's missing from, say, “Monsters University,” “Cars 3” and “Lightyear.” But “Inside Out 2” is one of the better revisits in the studio’s history because of how well it knows its audience.
Who hasn't felt anxiety getting the better of joy, or a natural connection between sadness and embarrassment? With empathy, hope and a heap of metaphors, it's a matured "Inside Out" that still understands the wonders and wrinkles of being a kid.
veryGood! (694)
Related
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- The Stanley x LoveShackFancy Collection is Here: Elevate Your Sip Before These Tumblers Sell Out
- Dogs kill baby boy inside New York home. Police are investigating what happened before the attack
- Fighting for the Native Forest of the Gran Chaco in Argentina
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Deputy who shot Sonya Massey thought her rebuke ‘in the name of Jesus’ indicated intent to kill him
- HBO's 'Hard Knocks' with Chicago Bears debuts: Full schedule, how to watch episodes
- Instructor charged with manslaughter in Pennsylvania plane crash that killed student pilot
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Pregnant Cardi B Reveals the Secret of How She Hid Her Baby Bump
Ranking
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Man known as pro-democracy activist convicted in US of giving China intel on dissidents
- USA men's volleyball stays unbeaten with quarterfinal win over Brazil
- Flavor Flav and the lost art of the hype man: Where are hip-hop's supporting actors?
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- 'Don't panic': What to do when the stock market sinks like a stone
- US female athletes dominating Paris Olympics. We have Title IX to thank
- Oakland A’s to sell stake in Coliseum to local Black development group
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Hiroshima governor says nuclear disarmament must be tackled as a pressing issue, not an ideal
US female athletes dominating Paris Olympics. We have Title IX to thank
USA men's volleyball stays unbeaten with quarterfinal win over Brazil
A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
New Study Reveals Signs of an Ancient Tundra Ecosystem Beneath Greenland’s Thickest Ice
SEC, Big Ten domination headlines US LBM Coaches Poll winners and losers
‘David Makes Man’ actor Akili McDowell is charged with murder in man’s shooting in Houston