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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Shorts  



1.1  Original short films  





1.2  Feature-related  





1.3  SparkShorts series  





1.4  Pixar Popcorn  





1.5  Notes  







2 Short series  



2.1  Cars Toons  



2.1.1  Mater's Tall Tales  





2.1.2  Tales from Radiator Springs  







2.2  Toy Story Toons  





2.3  Forky Asks a Question  





2.4  Dug Days  





2.5  Cars on the Road  







3 Compilations  





4 Other work  



4.1  Animation tests  





4.2  Commercials  





4.3  Co-op Program  







5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














List of Pixar shorts






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


This is a list of animated short films produced by Pixar Animation Studios.

Beginning with Pixar's first film Toy Story, almost all subsequent Pixar feature films have been shown in theaters along with a Pixar-created original short film, known as a "short." Other Pixar shorts, released only on home media, were created to showcase Pixar's technology or cinematic capabilities, or on commission for clients.

Pixar began producing shorts in the 1980s.[1] The first shorts were made while Pixar was still a computer hardware company, when John Lasseter was the only professional animator in the company's small animation department. Starting with Geri's Game, after Pixar had converted into an animation studio, all later shorts have been produced with a larger crew and budget.

Pixar produced four CGI shorts for the educational TV series Sesame Street between 1990 and 1994. The shorts illustrate different weights and directions starring Luxo Jr. and Luxo — Light & Heavy, Surprise, Up and Down, and Front and Back.[2]

During the development of Toy Story, Pixar set up a division to work on Pixar video games called Pixar's Interactive Products Group, specifically Toy Story entries in the Disney's Animated Storybook and Disney's Activity Center. Due to the intense resources required, the division was eventually folded and the staff were redistributed to start creating short films to accompany Pixar's theatrical releases.[3][4]

Beginning with A Bug's Life, Pixar has created extra content for each of their films that are not part of the main story. For their early theatrical releases, this content was in the form of outtakes and appeared as part of the film's credits. For each of their films, this content was a short made exclusively for the DVD release of the film.[5]

Toy Story 4 was the first film not to have a theatrical short before it. Coco and Onward had theatrical shorts from other subsidiaries related to Disney. Luca, Lightyear and Inside Out 2 had no theatrical shorts before them. Elemental was the first film, released theatrically in the United States, to have a Pixar-produced short in front of it since Incredibles 2.[6]

Shorts[edit]

Original short films[edit]

Title Year Director(s) Initial release with Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film
Theatrical Home[a]/Premiere
The Adventures of André & Wally B.[b] 1984 Alvy Ray Smith Toy Story
Luxo Jr. 1986 John Lasseter Toy Story 2[7] Nominated
Red's Dream 1987
Tin Toy 1988 Toy Story Won
Knick Knack 1989 Finding Nemo[8]
Geri's Game 1997 Jan Pinkava A Bug's Life Won
For the Birds 2000 Ralph Eggleston Monsters, Inc. (first release)
Luca (second release)
Monsters, Inc.
Boundin' 2003 Bud Luckey The Incredibles Nominated
One Man Band 2006 Andrew Jimenez and Mark Andrews Cars
Lifted 2007 Gary Rydstrom Ratatouille
Presto 2008 Doug Sweetland WALL-E
Partly Cloudy 2009 Peter Sohn Up Shortlisted[9]
Day & Night[10] 2010 Teddy Newton Toy Story 3 Nominated
La Luna[11] 2011 Enrico Casarosa Brave
The Blue Umbrella[12] 2013 Saschka Unseld Monsters University
Lava[13] 2014 James Ford Murphy Inside Out
Sanjay's Super Team[14] 2015 Sanjay Patel The Good Dinosaur Nominated
Piper[15] 2016 Alan Barillaro Finding Dory Won
Lou[16] 2017 David Mullins Cars 3 Nominated
Bao[17] 2018 Domee Shi Incredibles 2 Won

Feature-related[edit]

Title Year Director(s) Initial release with Associated Feature Film Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film
Theatrical Home[a]/Premiere
Mike's New Car 2002 Pete Docter and Roger Gould Monsters, Inc. Nominated
Exploring the Reef 2003 Roger Gould Finding Nemo
Jack-Jack Attack 2005 Brad Bird The Incredibles
Mr. Incredible and Pals Roger Gould
Mater and the Ghostlight 2006 John Lasseter Cars
Your Friend the Rat 2007 Jim Capobianco Ratatouille
BURN-E 2008 Angus MacLane WALL-E
Dug's Special Mission 2009 Ronnie del Carmen Up
George and A.J. Josh Cooley
The Legend of Mor'du[18] 2012 Brian Larsen Brave
Party Central[19] 2013 Kelsey Mann Muppets Most Wanted Disney Movies Anywhere Monsters University
Riley's First Date?[20][21] 2015 Josh Cooley Inside Out
Marine Life Interviews 2016 Ross Haldane Stevenson Finding Dory
Miss Fritter's Racing Skoool[22] 2017 James Ford Murphy Cars 3
Dante's Lunch Jason Katz Coco
Auntie Edna[23] 2018 Ted Mathot Incredibles 2
Lamp Life[24][25] 2020 Valerie LaPointe Disney+ Toy Story 4
22 vs. Earth[26] 2021 Kevin Nolting Soul
Ciao Alberto[27] McKenna Harris Luca

SparkShorts series[edit]

SparkShorts is a series of animated short films produced by Pixar filmmakers and artists, similar to its sister series Short Circuit from Walt Disney Animation Studios. It consists of longer independent shorts. Under the project, Pixar's employees are merely given six months and limited budgets to develop these animated short films.

Title Year Director(s) Premiered Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film
Purl[28][29] 2019 Kristen Lester YouTube
Smash and Grab[30][31][29] Brian Larsen
Kitbull[29] Rosana Sullivan YouTube
Theatrical with Turning Red
Nominated
Float[29] Bobby Alcid Rubio Disney+
Wind[29] Edwin Chang
Loop[29] 2020 Erica Milsom
Out[29] Steven Clay Hunter Shortlisted[32]
Burrow[33] Madeline Sharafian Disney+
Theatrical with Soul
Nominated
Twenty Something[34] 2021 Aphton Corbin Disney+
Nona[34] Louis Gonzales
Self[35] 2024 Searit Kahsay Huluf

Pixar Popcorn[edit]

Title Associated Feature Film Year(s) Director(s) Premiere
To Fitness and Beyond Toy Story 4 2021 Adam Rodriguez Disney+
Unparalleled Parking Cars 3 James Ford Murphy
Dory Finding Finding Dory Michal Makarewicz
Soul of the City Soul Christopher Chua
Fluffy Stuff with Ducky and Bunny: Love Toy Story 4 Robert H. Russ
Chore Day the Incredibles Way Incredibles 2 Alan Barillaro
A Day in the Life of the Dead Coco Allison Rutland
Fluffy Stuff with Ducky and Bunny: Three Heads Toy Story 4 Robert H. Russ
Dancing with the Cars Cars 3 Juan Carlos Navarro Carrión
Cookie Num Num Incredibles 2 Jae Hyung Kim

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b Non-compilation
  • ^ Produced by The Graphics Group, a subsidiary of Lucasfilm which would later become Pixar.
  • Short series[edit]

    Cars Toons[edit]

    Mater's Tall Tales[edit]

    Title Year Director(s) Premiered
    Rescue Squad Mater 2008 John Lasseter Toon Disney
    Mater the Greater
    El Materdor
    Tokyo Mater[36] Theatrical with Bolt
    Unidentified Flying Mater 2009 Disney Channel
    Monster Truck Mater 2010
    Heavy Metal Mater
    Moon Mater[37] Robert Gibbs DVD + Blu-ray with Mater's Tall Tales
    Mater Private Eye[38]
    Air Mater[39] 2011 DVD + Blu-ray with Cars 2
    Time Travel Mater[40] 2012 Disney Channel

    Tales from Radiator Springs[edit]

    Title Year Director(s) Premiered
    Hiccups 2013 Jeremy Lasky Disney Channel
    Bugged
    Spinning
    The Radiator Springs 500½ 2014 Robert Gibbs Disney Movies Anywhere

    Toy Story Toons[edit]

    Title Year Director(s) Premiered
    Hawaiian Vacation[41][42] 2011 Gary Rydstrom Theatrical with Cars 2
    Small Fry[43] Angus MacLane Theatrical with The Muppets
    Partysaurus Rex[44] 2012 Mark Walsh Theatrical with Finding Nemo 3D

    Forky Asks a Question[edit]

    Title Year(s) Director(s) Premiered
    What Is Money? 2019 Bob Peterson Disney+
    What Is a Friend?
    What Is Art?
    What Is Time?
    What Is Love?
    What Is a Computer?
    What Is a Leader?
    What Is a Pet?
    What Is Cheese? 2020
    What Is Reading?

    Dug Days[edit]

    Title Year(s) Director(s) Premiered
    Squirrel! 2021 Bob Peterson Disney+
    Puppies
    Flowers
    Smell
    Science
    Carl's Date[45] 2023 Theatrical with Elemental

    Cars on the Road[edit]

    Title Year(s) Director(s) Premiered
    Dino Park 2022 Steve Purcell Disney+
    Lights Out
    Salt Fever Brian Fee
    The Legend
    Show Time Bobby Podesta
    Trucks
    B-Movie Brian Fee
    Road Rumblers Steve Purcell
    Gettin’ Hitched Bobby Podesta

    Compilations[edit]

    Compilation title Release date Format
    Tiny Toy Stories October 29, 1996 VHS
    Pixar Short Films Collection, Volume 1 November 6, 2007 DVD, Blu-ray, Digital download
    Cars Toons: Mater's Tall Tales November 2, 2010
    Pixar Short Films Collection, Volume 2 November 13, 2012
    Toy Story of Terror!/Toy Story Toons August 19, 2014 DVD, Blu-ray
    Cars Toons: Bonus Disc 2013 DVD
    The Radiator Springs 500½ 2014 DVD
    Pixar Short Films Collection, Volume 3 November 13, 2018 DVD, Blu-ray, Digital download

    Other work[edit]

    Pixar made a series of shorts featuring Luxo Jr. for Sesame Street, which were Light & Heavy, Surprise, Up and Down, and Front and Back.[2] Pixar also produced numerous animation tests, commonly confused with theatrical shorts, including Beach Chair and Flags and Waves. They also produced several commercials after selling their software division to support themselves until Toy Story became successful. Pixar continues to produce commercials related to their films.

    Furthermore, in 1988, Apple's Advanced Technology Group produced "Pencil Test," a computer-animated short to showcase the Apple Macintosh II line.[46][47] Although Pixar was not officially affiliated with this film, several members of the Pixar staff advised and worked on it, including directors John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton, and producer Galyn Susman.[citation needed] John Lasseter was credited as "Coach" in the credits of the film.[48]

    Some of their other work includes:

    Animation tests[edit]

    Title Year
    Blowin' in the Wind[49] 1985
    Beach Chair[50] 1986
    Flags and Waves[50]
    Volume Visualization with the Pixar Image Computer[51] 1987

    Commercials[edit]

    Title Year Commissioned for
    Dance of the Waterlilies 1989 Toppan Printing
    Wake Up[52] Tropicana
    Babies 1990 Life Savers
    Galaxy Toppan Printing
    Dancing Cards California Lottery
    Quite a Package[52] Trident
    La Nouvelle Polo Volkswagen
    Pump Pillsbury
    Boxer[52] Listerine
    Light & Heavy and Surprise[2] 1991 Sesame Street
    Cracks Fleischmann's
    Moving Target Cellular One
    Gummie Savers Conga-Clio-award winner Life Savers
    Life At The Beach
    Orange Kiwi Passion Tropicana
    Warehouse
    Three Fruits Dancing
    Grand Opening Toys "R" Us
    Lunchbox Tetra Pak
    Knight Listerine
    Introduction[53] Apple Mac Classic
    Interview 1992 Volkswagen Polo
    Swinging Bottle[52] Listerine
    Daydream Tetra Pak
    Balloon Kellogg's All-Bran
    Hourglass
    Chomp Chomp IncrediBites[citation needed]
    Ladybug La Poste
    In the Mood Bunn Coffee Makers
    Cello 1993 Kellogg's All-Bran
    Sprinkler
    Up and Down[2] Sesame Street
    Hungry Bank South[citation needed]
    Chase
    Stranded Tetra Pak
    Bursting Carefree
    Chuckling Straws Fresca
    Launching Magic Jordan Magic Toothbrush[citation needed]
    Ideas at Work Dow Corning
    Arrows-Clio-award winner 1994 Listerine
    Mission
    Kaleidoscope Coca-Cola
    About to Uncover Arm & Hammer
    Here, There and Everywhere
    Woman Getting What She Wants Levi's
    We've Got Taste Nutri Grain
    Wacky Frootz-Clio-award winner[52] Life Savers
    Fresh Salad Boston Chicken
    Shaping Up Nicely Prime Option Credit Card[citation needed]
    Strong Option
    Front and Back[2] Sesame Street
    Balloon 1995 Chips Ahoy
    Circus
    Flamingo Ortho
    Pinheads Dockers
    Amazin' Straws Hershey's
    Learning Lesson Coca-Cola
    Secret Weapon
    Pin Box
    Toy Story video game commercial Disney Interactive
    Art Store Break McDonald's
    Christmas Conga Tower Records
    Magic Desktop 1996 Sun Microsystems
    Magnets-Clio-award winner Hallmark
    Check Me Out Twizzlers
    Let Me In
    68th Academy Awards (Toy Story segment) Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
    The Tastetations Hershey's
    Toy Story CD-Rom – "Out of the Box" Disney Interactive
    Wild Frijoles Rosarita[citation needed]
    Shake It Levi's
    Toy Story Treats ABC
    Look Away 1997 Nickelodeon & UNICEF
    A Bug's Life – "Belt Loop 1" 1998 McDonald's
    A Bug's Life – "Belt Loop 2"
    A Bug's Life – "Big Toys"
    A Bug's Life – "Nothing Good on TV"
    A Bug's Life – "Nothing Good on TV Jr."
    A Bug's Life – "Ponkickies" 1999 Fuji Television
    71st Academy Awards (A Bug's Life segment) Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
    Toy Story 2 – "Up Periscope" McDonald's
    Toy Story 2 – "Remote"
    Toy Story 2 – "Toys vs. Candy"
    Toy Story 2 – "Surveillance"
    Toy Story 2 Bumpers[53] ABC
    Toy Story 2 Monday Night Football
    Toy Story 2 – "Ponkickies" Fuji Television
    72nd Academy Awards (Toy Story 2 segment) 2000 Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
    Jessie's Acceptance Speech Cowgirl Hall of Fame
    SIGGRAPH 2001 Opening Video (Buzz Lightyear sequence) 2001 SIGGRAPH
    Monsters, Inc. Bumpers ABC
    Monsters, Inc. Monday Night Football
    Monsters, Inc. — "Happy Meal Toy" McDonald's
    Monsters, Inc. — "Ponkickies" Fuji Television
    Buzz Blasts 2002 Kellogg's
    Disney Cereal — "CDs" (Buzz Lightyear sequence)
    Finding Nemo — "Ponkickies" 2003 Fuji Television
    Finding Nemo — "Schoolfish" ABC
    Finding Nemo — "Laugh" McDonald's
    The Incredibles — "Happy Meal Toys" 2004
    The Incredibles — "SBC YAHOO!" Yahoo!
    Vowellett – An Essay by Sarah Vowell 2005 The Incredibles two-disc collector's edition DVD set
    Cars — "Happy Meal Toys" 2006 McDonald's
    Cars — "State Farm" State Farm
    Cars — "Walmart" Walmart
    Cars — "Hertz" Hertz
    Cars — "Opel Promotion 1" Opel
    Cars — "Opel Promotion 2"
    Cars — "AT&T Yahoo Broadband" AT&T
    Cars — "Energizer" Energizer
    Wal-Mart Exclusive Cars DVD 2-pack Advertisement Wal-Mart
    Ratatouille — "Nissan Note" 2007 Nissan
    Up — "Aflac" 2009 Aflac
    Toy Story 3 2010 USPS
    Toy Story 3 — "Target" Target
    Toy Story 3 — "Visa" Visa
    Toy Story 3 — "Aflac" Aflac
    Toy Story's Search Story[54] Google
    Toy Story The Third Dimension Dolby
    Cars 2 — "Mom on a Mission" 2011 Target
    Cars 2 — "State Farm" State Farm
    Cars 2 — "V12 TV" V12 TV
    Cars 2 — "RTS" Russian Traffic Safety
    Cars 2 — "Profil Plus" / "Answer Seguros" Profil Plus
    Publicité Oscaro Cars 2 pour l'émission Tout le sport Oscaro
    Oscaro.com , partenaire de la saga Cars Oscaro
    Mater Sheds Some Lights at Cars Land 2012 Cars Land
    Cars Land Opening Day
    Mater Bells
    Monsters University — "Mess" 2013 Swiffer
    Toy Story of Terror! — "Sky" Sky UK
    Toy Story That Time Forgot — "Sky" 2014
    Inside Out — "Clorox" 2015 Clorox
    Inside Out — "State Farm" State Farm
    Inside Out — "Sky" Sky UK
    Inside Out — "Lunch" Subway
    88th Academy Awards (Woody and Buzz segment) 2016 Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
    Finding Dory — "Coppertone" Coppertone
    Finding Dory — "Hide and Seek" Band-Aid
    Finding Dory — "Kellogg's" Kellogg's
    Cars 3 — "Alamo Promo Ad" 2017 Alamo Rent a Car
    Cars 3 — "Broken Part" Allianz
    Cars 3 — "Die neue Allianz Autoversicherung"
    Cars 3 — "Every Car Has a Personality" Autotrader.com
    Cars 3 — "Sun Protection" Coppertone
    Cars 3 — "Duracell Breaking News" Duracell
    Cars 3 x Oscaro Oscaro
    Incredibles 2 — "Sky" 2018 Sky UK
    Incredibles 2 — "Happy Meal" McDonald's
    Toy Story 4 — "Happy Meal" 2019
    Toy Story 4 — "Dance Party" Chrysler Pacifica
    Toy Story 4 — "Snack Attack" Babybel
    Toy Story 4 Seiban
    Toy Story 42
    Toy Story 4 — "Make Joy Happen" JD.com
    Toy Story 4 AR Regal Cinemas
    Pixar: 30 Years of Art & Animation Vivid Sydney
    Halloween Time at the Disneyland Resort Disneyland Resort
    Onward — "Happy Meal" 2020 McDonald's
    Onward Whirlpool Corporation
    Soul Allianz
    Soul — "Happy Meal" McDonald's
    Luca — "Happy Meal" 2021
    Lightyear — "Happy Meal" 2022
    Elemental — "Happy Meal" 2023
    Inside Out 2 — "Happy Meal" 2024
    Inside Out 2 — "Uber" Uber

    The Pixar Co-op Program, a part of the Pixar University professional development program, allows their animators to use Pixar resources to produce independent films.[55][56]

    Some of their Co-op work includes:

    Co-op Program[edit]

    Title Year Director(s) Premiered
    The Dam Keeper 2014 Robert Kondo and Daisuke Tsutsumi 64th Berlin International Film Festival[57][58][59]
    Borrowed Time 2016 Andrew Coats and Lou Hamou-Lhadj Austin Film Festival[60]
    Weekends 2017 Trevor Jimenez Warsaw International Film Festival[61]
    Automaton 2020 Krzysztof Rost SIGGRAPH[62]
    Pete 2022 Brett Parker Tribeca Film Festival[63]
    Starling 2023 Mitra Shahidi Tribeca Film Festival[64][65][66]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Haswell, Helen (2014). "To Infinity and Back Again: Hand-drawn Aesthetic and Affection for the Past in Pixar's Pioneering Animation". Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media (8).
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  • ^ Apple - Pencil Test (1988) (LaserDisc 1080p rip) - YouTube
  • ^ "Tumblr post from an owner of the Made in Point Richmond DVD". Archived from the original on December 11, 2017. Retrieved June 29, 2017.
  • ^ a b Simon, Ben (November 21, 2007). "Pixar Short Films Collection: Volume 1". Animated Views. Retrieved September 2, 2013.
  • ^ VintageCG. "Pixar - Volume Visualization on Image Computer (1987)". YouTube. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
  • ^ a b c d e Sciretta, Peter (July 22, 2009). "Pixar's Television Commercials". /Film. Retrieved September 2, 2013.
  • ^ a b "Images from an owner of the Made in Point Richmond DVD". Retrieved June 29, 2017.
  • ^ Wong, Robert (June 8, 2010). "Woody and Buzz star in a Google Search Story". Official Google Blog. Retrieved May 4, 2015.
  • ^ Hill, Libby (October 17, 2016). "Two Pixar animators explore the depths of grief and guilt in 'Borrowed Time'". LA Times. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  • ^ Desowitz, Bill (October 24, 2016). "'Borrowed Time': How Two Pixar Animators Made a Daring, Off-Brand Western Short". Indiewire. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  • ^ Kelly, Samantha Murphy (April 17, 2014). "How 2 Animators Independently Recreated Pixar Magic". Mashable. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  • ^ Solomon, Charles (January 29, 2015). "Embracing a Fantasy From Their Pixar Past". The New York Times. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  • ^ Flores, Terry (February 10, 2015). "'Dam Keeper' Filmmakers Talk About Animated Short Oscar Nom, Leaving Pixar and What's Next". Variety. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  • ^ Failes, Ian (July 29, 2016). "How Andrew Coats and Lou Hamou-Lhadj Made The Independent Short 'Borrowed Time' Inside Pixar". Cartoon Brew. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  • ^ "WATCH: Trevor Jimenez's Oscar-Shortlisted 'Weekends' Returns Online". Animation World Network. December 27, 2018. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  • ^ "'Automaton' Pixar's Next Co-Op Short Film Premiering at SIGGRAPH 2020". Pixar Post. August 19, 2020. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  • ^ Pete at the Tribeca Film Festival
  • ^ Dower, Glen (June 17, 2023). "Tribeca 2023: A Review Of This Years' Animated Shorts". Cinema Scholars. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  • ^ "Exclusive Director Mitra Shahidi Discusses Her Charming Tribeca Prize Winning Short 'Starling'". www.animationmagazine.net. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  • ^ Lang, Jamie (September 29, 2023). "2024 Oscars Short Film Contenders: 'Starling' Director Mitra Shahidi". Cartoon Brew. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  • External links[edit]


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