The Pixar Theory

pixar theory

Every Pixar movie is connected. I explain how, and possibly why.

In 2012, I watched a video on Cracked.com that introduced the idea (at least to me) that all of the Pixar movies actually exist within the same universe. Since then, I’ve obsessed over this concept, working to complete what I call The Pixar Theory, a working narrative that ties all of the Pixar movies into one cohesive timeline with a main theme. Another, longer, title is “The Grand Unifying Theory of Pixar Movies.”

This theory covers every feature-length movie made by Pixar Animation Studios since 1995. They include:

  • Toy Story
  • A Bug’s Life
  • Toy Story 2
  • Monsters Inc.
  • Finding Nemo
  • The Incredibles
  • Cars
  • Ratatouille
  • Wall-E
  • Up
  • Toy Story 3
  • Cars 2
  • Brave
  • Monsters University
  • Inside Out (in Part 2)
  • The Good Dinosaur (in Part 3)
  • Finding Dory (in Part 4)
  • Cars 3, Coco, Incredibles 2, and Toy Story 4 will be included in the upcoming book

The point of this theory is to have fun and exercise your imagination while simultaneously finding interesting connections between these fantastic movies. The trick is not take any of it too seriously. If you would like to experience a shorter version of this theory, check out the visualized Pixar Theory Timeline. 

In fact, I highly suggest you watch this video I made with Screen Junkies/Fandom below. It more thoroughly lays out this theory and its most complex ideas. It’s also a far more “current” version of the theory compared to the rest of this post. Plus, it has more movies included! Enjoy.

The original Pixar Theory:

As of this writing in 2013, Brave is the first and last movie in the timeline. Obviously, this movie about a Scottish kingdom during the Dark Ages is the earliest time period covered by the Pixar films, but it’s also the only Pixar movie that actually explains why animals in the Pixar universe behave like humans sometimes.

Pixar Theory

In Brave, Merida discovers that there is “magic” that can solve her problems but inadvertently turns her mother into a bear. We find out that this magic comes from an odd witch seemingly connected to the mysterious will-of-the-wisps. Not only do we see animals behaving like humans, but we also see brooms (inanimate objects) behaving like people in the witch’s shop.

We also learn that this witch inexplicably disappears every time she passes through doors, leading us to believe that she may not even exist. Don’t get ahead of me, but we’ll come back to Brave. Let’s just say that for now, the witch is someone we know from a different movie in the timeline.

Pixar Theory

[Some of you have pointed out that the animals in Brave gradually regress back into an animal state, disproving the idea that this is the source of animals acting like humans. My rebuttal is simple. They regress because the magic wears off. Over time, their evolving intelligence grows naturally.]

Centuries later, the animals from Brave that have been experimented on by the witch have interbred, creating a large-scale population of animals slowly gaining personification and intelligence on their own.

There are two progressions: the progression of the animals and the progression of artificial intelligence. The events of the following movies set up a power struggle between humans, animals, and machines.

The stage for all-out war in regards to animals is set by Ratatouille, Finding Nemo, and Up, in that order. Notice I left out A Bug’s Life, but I’ll explain why later.

In Ratatouille, we see animals experimenting with their growing personification in small, controlled experiments.

Pixar Theory

Remy wants to cook, which is something only humans explicitly do. He crafts a relationship with a small group of humans and finds success. Meanwhile, the villain of Ratatouille, Chef Skinner, disappears. What happened to him? What did he do with his newfound knowledge that animals were capable of transcending their instincts and performing duties better than humans?

It’s possible that Charles Muntz, the antagonist of Up, learned of this startling rumor, giving him the idea to begin inventing devices that would harness the thoughts of animals, namely his dogs, through translator collars. Those collars indicated to Muntz that animals are smarter and more like humans than we think. He needed this technology to find the exotic bird he’s obsessed over, and he even comments on how many dogs he’s lost since he arrived in South America.

Pixar Theory

But then Dug and the rest of his experiments are set free after Muntz’s demise, and we don’t know the full implications of that, but what we do know is that animosity between the animals and humans is growing steadily. Now that humans have discovered the potential of animals, they are beginning to cross the line. To develop this new technology, the humans begin an industrial revolution hinted at in Up.

[Some have pointed out that Muntz was working in South America before the events of Ratatouille. This is true, but it is not explicitly stated how and when he developed the collars. Also, we know Ratatouille takes place before Up for several reasons. In Toy Story 3, a postcard on Andy’s wall has Carl and Ellie’s name and address on it (including their last names to confirm). This confirms that in 2010, the time of Toy Story 3, Ellie is still alive or hasn’t been dead long. This supports the idea that Up takes place years later.]

Pixar Theory

In the beginning of Up, Carl is forced to give up his house to a corporation because they are expanding the city.

Wait a second. What corporation is guilty for polluting the earth and wiping out life in the distant future because of technological overreach?

Pixar Theory

Buy-n-Large (BNL), a corporation that runs just about everything by the time we get to Wall-E. In the“History of BNL” commercial from the movie, we’re told that BNL has even taken over the world governments. Did you catch that this one corporation achieved global dominance? Interestingly, this is the same organization alluded to in Toy Story 3:

Pixar Theory

In Finding Nemo, we have an entire population of sea creatures uniting to save a fish that was captured by humans. BNL shows up again in this universe via another news article that talks about a beautiful underwater world.

Lines are being crossed. Humans are beginning to antagonize the increasingly networked and intelligent animals.

Think about Dory from Finding Nemo for a second. She stands apart from most of the other fish. Why? She isn’t as intelligent. Her short-term memory loss is likely a result of her not being as advanced as the other sea creatures, which is a reasonable explanation for how rapidly these creatures are evolving.

Pixar Theory

It’s likely that the sequel to Finding Nemo, which is about Dory, will touch on this and further explain why. We may also get some more evidence pointing to animosity between humans and animals.

[Some great users have pointed out that Dory is actually more intelligent and shows signs of growth due to her ability to read and communicate with whales. This would actually show signs of how the animals are beginning to change in intelligence gradually.]

And that is the furthest movie in the “animal” side of things. When it comes to A.I., we start with The Incredibles. Who is the main villain of this movie? You probably thought of Buddy, a.ka. Syndrome, who basically commits genocide on super-powered humans.

Pixar Theory

Or does he? Buddy didn’t have any powers. He used technology to enact revenge on Mr. Incredible for not taking him seriously. Seems a little odd that the man went so far as to commit genocide.

[A lot of people have been arguing about where The Incredibles actually takes place because we see technology from modern times and the 1980s even though everything has a 1960s vibe. This is cleared by Brad Bird, the director, who says the movie takes place in an alternate 1960s, which means the movie opens in the 1950s.]

And how does he kill all of the supers? He creates the omnidroid, an A.I. “killbot” that learns the moves of every super-human and adapts. When Mr. Incredible is first told about this machine, Mirage mentions that it is an advanced artificial intelligence that has gone rogue.

Mr. Incredible points out that it got smart enough to wonder why it had to take orders.  The omnidroid eventually turns on Syndrome, and starts attacking humans in the city. Why would an A.I. want to just attack randomly? Do machines have an inherent hatred of humans?

The movie even shows clips of the superheroes with capes being done in by inanimate objects, such as plane turbines…accidentally.

Pixar Theory

Pixar Theory

But why would machines want to get rid of humans in the first place? We know that animals don’t like humans because they are polluting the Earth and experimenting on them, but why would the machines have an issue?

Enter Toy Story. Here we see humans using and discarding “objects” that are clearly sentient. Yes, the toys love it Uncle Tom style, but over the course of the Toy Story sequels, we see toys becoming fed up. But wait, toys and inanimate objects aren’t necessarily machines, so how do they have some kind of intelligence?

Syndrome points to the answer. He tells Mr. Incredible that his lasers are powered by Zero Point Energy. This is the electromagnetic energy that exists in a vacuum. It’s the unseen energy we find in wavelengths and a reasonable explanation for how toys and objects in the Pixar world draw power.

Pixar Theory

By the events of the Toy Story movies, we are in the 90s until 2010. It’s been 40-50 years or so since the events of The Incredibles, giving A.I. plenty of time to develop BNL.

Meanwhile, Pixar is hinting at dissatisfaction among pockets of toy civilizations. The toys rise up against Sid in the first movie. Jesse resents her owner, Emily, for abandoning her. Lotso Huggin’ Bear straight up hates humans by the third movie.

Toys are obviously not satisfied with the status quo, providing a reason for why machines and objects alike are ready to take over.

So, by the 2000s, the super-humans are all but gone, and mankind is vulnerable. Animals, who want to rise up Planet of the Apes style, have the ability to take over, but we don’t see this happen.

Also, A.I. never takes over humans by force. Why do you think that is? It’s reasonable to assume that machines did take over, just not as we expected. The machines used BNL, a faceless corporation (which are basically faceless in nature) to dominate the world, starting in the 1960s after the Omnidroid fails to defeat the Incredibles.

In each of the Toy Story movies, it’s made painfully clear that sentient objects rely on humans for everything. For fulfillment and even energy. It’s hinted at that the Toys lose all life when put away in “storage” unless they are in a museum that will get them seen by humans.

Pixar Theory

So machines decide to control humans by using a corporation that suits their every need, leading to an industrial revolution that eventually leads to…pollution. When the animals rise up against the humans to stop them from polluting the earth, who will save them? The machines.

We know that the machines will win the war, too, because after this war, there are almost no animals left on Earth. Who’s left?

Pixar Theory

Because the machines tip everything out of balance, Earth becomes an unfit planet for humans and animals, so the remaining humans are put on Axiom (or Noah’s Ark if you want to carry on the Biblical theme where Wall-E is basically Robot Jesus and his love interest is aptly named Eve) as a last-ditch effort to save the human race.

Pixar Theory

On Axiom, the humans have no purpose aside from having their needs met by the machines. The machines have made humans dependent on them for everything because that is how they were treated as “toys.” It’s all they know.

Pixar Theory

Meanwhile on Earth, machines are left behind to populate the world and run things, explaining human landmarks and traditions still being prominent in Cars. There are no animals or humans in this version of Earth because they’re all gone, but we do know that the planet still has many human influences left.

[Some have noted that the world of Cars can’t be after humans left because there’s no pollution shown in the movies. If you look carefully at Wall-E, however, the world is never shown during this time, so we don’t really know how badly the Earth was polluted.]

[It’s possible that the machines sent humans away to curb overpopulation and fix the environment without them, but the world was drained of resources as a result of machines populating the Earth. That would explain why the machines abandoned Earth entirely, leaving only Wall-E behind.]

In Cars 2, the cars go to Europe and Japan, making it plain that this is all taking place on Earth as we know it. So what happened to the cars? We’ve learned by now that humans are the source of energy for the machines. That’s why they never got rid of them.

In Wall-E, they point out that BNL intended to bring the humans back once the planet was clean again, but they failed. The machines on Earth eventually died out, though we don’t know how.

Pixar Theory

What we do know is that there is an energy crisis in Cars 2, with oil being the only way society trudges on despite its dangers. We even learn that the Allinol corporation was using “green energy” as a catalyst for a fuel war in order to turn cars away from alternative energy sources. That “clean” fuel could have been used to wipe out many of the cars, very quickly.

Pixar Theory

[Someone pointed out that “all in all” means the same thing as “by and large” making the connection between Cars and Wall-E even more substantial.]

Which brings us back to Wall-E. Have you ever wondered why Wall-E was the only machine left? We know that the movie begins 800 years after humans have left Earth on Axiom, governed by the AutoPilot (another A.I. reference).

Could it be that Wall-E’s fascination with human culture and friendship with a cockroach is what allowed him to keep finding fulfillment and the ability to maintain his personality? That’s why he was special and liberated the humans.

He remembered the times when humans and machines lived in peace, away from all of the pollution caused by both sides.

Pixar Theory

After Wall-E liberates the humans and they rebuild society back on Earth, what happens then? During the end credits of Wall-E, we see the shoe that contains the last of plant life. It grows into a mighty tree. A tree that strikingly resembles the central tree in A Bug’s Life.

Pixar Theory

Pixar Theory

Pixar Theory

That’s right. The reason no humans show up in A Bug’s Life is because there aren’t a lot left. We know because of the cockroach that some of the insects survived, meaning they would have rebounded a bit faster, though the movie had to be far enough in the timeline for birds to have returned as well, though they’re noticeably less intelligent than the bugs.

[I’ll admit, the trees looking similar isn’t enough to support the idea that A Bug’s Life takes place after Wall-E, but there’s definitely more reasons for why it’s likely. Also, I’ll bring the tree up again later because it appears in Up as well.]

There’s something strikingly different about A Bug’s Life when compared to other Pixar portrayals of animals, which leads me to believe it takes place in the future. Unlike Ratatouille, Up, and Finding Nemo, the bugs have many human activities similar to what the rats in Ratatouille were merely experimenting with.

The bugs have cities, bars, advertisements, their own machines, know what a bloody mary is and even have a traveling circus. This all assumes that the movie is in a different time period.

The other factor that sets A Bug’s Life apart from other Pixar movies is the fact that it is the only one, besides Cars and Cars 2, that doesn’t revolve (or even include) humans.

Pixar Theory

[Okay there is a a lot of contention over the idea that A Bug’s Life takes place post-apocalypse, but hear me out. The reason I am so inclined to push the idea is because of how different the bug world is from the “animal” movies. No other Pixar movie has animals wearing clothing, wild inventions, animals creating machines, or so much human influence like bars and cities.]

[In Finding Nemo, the most human thing we see is a school, and even that is pretty stripped down. But in A Bug’s Life, we have a world where humans are barely even implied. At one point, one of the ants tells Flik not to leave the island because there are “snakes, birds, and bigger bugs out there.” He doesn’t even bring up humans.

[Yes, there are some humans, like the kid who allegedly picked the wings off of the homeless bug, but that still fits in a post Wall-E world. Also, the bugs have to be irradiated for them to live such long lifespans. The average lifespan of an ant is just 3 months, but these ants all survive an entire summer and allude to being around for quite some time by saying things like “this happens every year.” One of the ants even says he “feels 90 again.” That works if you accept that the ants are sturdier due to evolution and mutated genes.]

There’s another Pixar movie that was supposed to be released in 2012, but it was cancelled and replaced with Brave. This movie was called Newt, and I believe it might have fit in this part of the timeline post-Wall-E. The movie’s supposed plot: “What happens when the last remaining male and female blue-footed newts on the planet are forced together by science to save the species, and they can’t stand each other?” 

Pixar Theory

A movie about an endangered species rebuilding itself could lend itself nicely to this theory, but since the movie was never released, I’m just speculating.

So what happens next? Humanity, machines, and animals grow in harmony to the point where a new super species is born. Monsters. The monsters civilization is actually Earth in the incredibly distant future.

[Someone wisely pointed out that in Monsters University, the college is said to be founded in 1313. If we’re really in the future, then that means the monsters could have reset society and begun using their own calendar. That could mean Monsters Inc. takes place up to 1400 (or more) years after A Bug’s Life.]

Where did they come from? It’s possible that the monsters are simply the personified animals mutated after the diseased earth was irradiated for 800 years.

[Not during Wall-E. I would guess that it took hundreds of years after Wall-E for the animals to become monsters]

Pixar Theory

Whatever the reason, these monsters seem to all look like horribly mutated animals, only larger and civilized. They have cities and even colleges, as we see in Monsters University.

[An issue some have found is that this doesn’t properly explain what happened to humans. I haven’t settled on a theory I really like yet, but I’m leaning towards the idea that monsters and machines eventually forgot that they need humans and got rid of them again, not realizing their mistake until all humans died out. Another explanation is that humans just couldn’t survive on Earth anymore.]

In Monsters Inc., they have an energy crisis because they are in a future earth without humans. Humans are the source of energy, but thanks to the machines, again, the Monsters find a way to use doors to travel to the human world. Only, it’s not different dimensions.

Pixar Theory

The monsters are going back in time. They’re harvesting energy to keep from becoming extinct by going back to when humans were most prominent. The peak of civilization, if you will. Though a lot of time has passed, animosity towards humans never really went away for animals/monsters.

Monsters must have relied on anti-human instincts to believe that just touching a human would corrupt their world like it did in the past. So they scare humans to gather their energy until they realize that laughter (green energy) is more efficient because it is positive in nature.

[An alternative explanation that fits even better that some of you brought up: The machines and monsters created the time travel doors but realized that messing with time could erase their existence and change history. So, they falsely trained monsters to believe that humans are toxic and from another dimension, making it suicide for a monster to interact too much with their world.]

[Another issue is how the monsters seem to worry about kids “being less scared these days.” It’s likely that going in the past takes a lot of energy, so the monsters can only go back as far as the practice still returns a profit in energy. To them, they’re just moving through the same dimension of time, but the monsters at the top know that eventually, they’ll run out. This is why Waternose is so bent on capturing children and enslaving them.]

We even see a connection between A Bug’s Life and Monsters Inc. via the trailer we see in both movies. As you can see, the trailer looks exactly the same, except the one in A Bug’s Life is noticeably older and more decrepit, while the one in Monsters Inc. (where Randall is sent via a door) has humans and looks newer.

Pixar Theory

Look at the picture above. On the left is the trailer from A Bug’s Life and the one on the right is from Monsters Inc. The one on the left looks older and more rundown. Even the vegetation is noticeably dryer and there’s less of it. The trailer on the right has humans and the frame even includes tall grass and a tree hanging overhead.

[Some have argued that the trailer in A Bug’s Life should be nothing but dust. I disagree based on how barely intact other buildings were in Wall-E. They also bring up the bug zapper that is powered by electricity. The zapper could easily be solar powered, just like Wall-E. The bugs probably used it as a light source to signal other bugs to “Bug City.” Also, the trailer in A Bug’s Life never shows lights in the trailer like it does for Monsters Inc.]

That said, Monsters Inc. is so far the most futuristic Pixar movie. By the end, humans, animals, and machines have finally found a way to understand each other and live harmoniously.

And then there’s Boo. What do you think happened to her? She saw everything take place in future earth where “kitty” was able to talk. She became obsessed with finding out what happened to her friend Sully and why animals in her time weren’t quite as smart as the ones she’d seen in the future.

She remembers that “doors” are the key to how she found Sully in the first place and becomes…

Pixar Theory

A WITCH. Yes, Boo is the witch from Brave. She figures out how to travel in time to find Sully, and goes back to what she believes is the source: The will-of-the-wisps.

They are what started everything, and as a witch, she cultivates this magic in an attempt to find Sully by creating doors going backwards and forwards in time.

[Just to clarify: The theory is that Boo discovered a way to use doors to travel through time on her own, possibly by developing magic on her own. She probably went back in time to the Dark Ages to get more magic from the will-o-wisps.]

How do we know? In Brave, you can briefly see a drawing in the workshop. It’s Sully.

Pixar Theory

We even see the Pizza Planet truck carved as a wooden toy in her shop, which makes no sense unless she’s seen one before…(and I’m sure she has since that truck is in almost every Pixar movie). If you look closely, you can see the carved truck below.

Pixar Theory

You remember Merida opening doors and the witch constantly disappearing? It’s because those doors are made the same way from Monsters Inc. They transport across time and that is why Merida couldn’t find the witch later in the movie.

[A lot of people have brought up how easter eggs are scattered throughout all the Pixar movies. I barely scratch the surface, but a great theory offered by some that I support is that these easter eggs are planted by Boo either intentionally or accidentally as she travels through time to find Sully. Some support for that is the fact that every easter egg in Brave lies in her workshop.]

But wait. How did Boo travel in time in the first place, and why is she obsessed with wood? Boo must have discovered that wood has been the source of energy all along, not just humans. The machines and monsters in Monsters Inc. use doors because they’re made of wood and found a way to use that energy to travel in time.

[Many have pointed out how the door that banishes monsters is metal. That’s probably because wood is used to harness this magic, and using a metal door would stop a banished monster from going back through it.]

Obsessed with finding Sully, Boo travelled across the Pixar universe using doors.

[It’s even possible that the wood from the tree in A Bug’s Life is the source of Flik’s ingenuity, due to his fascination and respect for seeds growing into trees. The tree also bears a resemblance to the one in Up that Carl and Ellie frequented, which could be the source of Carl’s wild creativity in using balloons to transport his house.]

[This also explains why Flik and Heimlich from A Bug’s Life show up in Toy Story 2, which would be centuries before their time. Boo was trying to go to the future and could have fallen short by landing in the post-Wall-E time. She would need wood to keep time traveling, but there’s not much around yet, so she stumbles upon the tree in A Bug’s Life. She could have accidentally brought back a few bugs with her when traveling backwards in time.]

So Boo went back to the Dark Ages, probably because she could use plenty of wood there for her experiments or to study the will-o-wisps. We know that her first encounter with Mor’du ended with her turning him into a monstrous bear, but he regresses.

She probably wanted to turn him into a bear because Sully resembles a bear, and she is still trying to figure out where Sully comes from.

Does Boo ever find Sully? I like to think so. He surely reunited with her at least once as a child at the end of Monsters Inc., but eventually, he had to stop visiting.

But her love for Sully is, after all, the crux of the entire Pixar universe. The love of different people of different ages and even different species finding ways to live on Earth without destroying it because of a lust for energy.

And that is the Pixar Theory.

For Inside Out, The Good Dinosaur, and Finding Dory, the story continues in Parts 2,3, and 4  respectively, so here are some other helpful links for your reading pleasure:


Thanks for reading this. Be sure to say hey on Twitter: @JonNegroni

All images courtesy of Disney/Pixar

11,104 thoughts on “The Pixar Theory

  1. This is my back story theory thing of this theory:
    So none of this happened until Boo was 9 and after that she learned that there is magic and develops it and then goes back it time to brave by accident and then this big conflict happens where she has screwed up many time so she goes back and back again and before she knows it she’s old as hell so she goes back again and then this theory comes in play.So basically she learned that humanity was coming to an end so she try’s to stop it by going back in time and she can only go back in time once more because she too old and just goes with the flow and only able to go forward in time
    That’s my back story theory of what happened and how Boo screwed up.

    • Do you think that Meet the Robinsons has something to do with the time traveling theory…or the whole robots vs human war might be caused by Dorris the little hat from meet the ROBINSONS.My mind is blowing up trying to put this huge puzzle together.WOW

    • That is a fair point but I’m sure tht boo is in toy story 3 as one of the kids in daycare type into YouTube boo when she is older and you will see what I mean

  2. it is incredibly vague how boo gained her power to travel through time, IF the doors time travel at all. It is called the ‘human world’ in Monster’s U and Monster’s inc, not the human time. What does wood and time travel have to do with each other anyway?

    • Well this is the Pixar universe so things are different which has been said many times, now your not wrong about your “question” but after all this is just a therory

    • Yes, but that is just the phrase monsters use for it. It is what caught on.

    • WELL maybe he is missing a movie like meet the robinsons which might also tie in to the whole time traveling theory but i’m not sure how.Also the war against humans and robots might be caused by the little flying hat from meet the robinsons.

      • Yo meet the Robinsons isn’t a Pixar movie

    • The Monsters don’t necessarily know they are going through time. Because they have come to use that power doesn’t mean they fully understand the implications.

      • He said in his theory that the monsters and machines got rid of the humans but in order to get energy they travel back in time to make them scream/laugh for energy.

    • Time travel related machines need a power source, wood, being the most common source of power, is a likely choice.

    • The machines made the monsters think that humans live in a different dimension and that they were toxic so that the monsters don’t change the past. When the humans left the earth because it was unclean all the remaining life either died or was exposed to the unclean environment. When wall-e plants the exposed sapling in the ground a new type of tree grows with a new type of wood allowing time travel. Does that answer your question.

  3. Isn’t dinoco the sponsor in cars?

  4. Hi i just woke up and came into the living room and my cousinand my brother were watching madagascar 3 and im not sure if it madagascar is a pixar movie but there is this part in madagascar 3 were this french lady is singing and these men are in casts. They get up break the cast they are all crying but at that moment i see the little old man from up standing in the front.

    • Unrelated Movie, Commen Is Invalid

  5. Why are you thinking so much scientific theories? Its just a movie for kids are you that bored? Not trying to be offensive but really?

    • This is an absolutely terrible attitude to have about anything… “wow I can’t believe you would waste your time on this, obviously you have nothing better to do, how childish, you clearly have no life.” Just because these movies were made for children doesn’t mean only children can enjoy them. Pixar adds lots of depth to their movies that most children would miss. A lot of people find these kind of pop culture theories very entertaining and i’m sure the author had a great time unraveling it. Just because this doesn’t fit the criteria for what you find entertaining/ interesting (which i’m sure is watching two and a half men all day) doesn’t mean you have the right to look down upon people who spend their time differently.

    • This might be a movie FOR kids, but it’s made by adults! I can see it, but its crazy to think that at one point, someone had to mastermind this crazy idea.

    • If may be fun to speculate, but to me it is also over-analysis. My complaint is with the comment “just some movies for kids.” I think the biggest tragedy is that because they are animated and appeal to kids, that most people without kids or whose kids were older when Bugs Life came out don’t realize that Pixar movies are for all audiences.

  6. Children watch these movies because they like them so he is just trying to have fun and tell people a good story.

  7. In Toy story, Dinoco is only a gas station.
    Then, on Cars Dinoco is an oil company that is run by Tex Dinoco. His biography in the Pixar WIki clearly says: “Tex has been Dinoco’s team owner and talent scout for over 20 years.(…)He started Dinoco with just one tiny oil well, and now he runs the largest oil empire in the world.”
    20 years? So, “Cars” is about 18-20 years from “Toy Story 1”!
    Then we have a look at Toy Story 2 and 3. No talking cars on the streets. No “Tex Dinoco”. Would “Cars” be in a diferent dimension? Or would the cars just be hiding from the humans in Radiator Springs?
    Then, in Cars 2, the Dinoco company is referred to again. The alternative fuel was already invented. Has Dinoco created it’s own alternative fuel? Or is their gasoline just a beverage?

    • This theory is still compatible with your point, although instead of the machines vs. animal war taking place way later than Toy Story 3, it would have to be, like you said, approximately twenty years later.

      But yeah, the whole Cars series throws a wrench in this whole theory… Cars is definitely the oddball out of all the Pixar movies.

      • Well actually the key lies in the cars movies, there isnt one universe, there is two.In one robots take over, in the other animals take over. The magic in brave is what caused this “time line split” if you will. I have not seen brave in its full so correct me if I’m wrong, the humans who get turned into animals, if not changed back, become the animal they where transformed into. What if the human DNA didn’t leave the animals body entirely and, over time, this actually created the monsters from monsters inc/university. In the alternate time line created by the witches magic the humans continue to create advanced tech, which leads me up to the incredibles, the animal dna from the witches experiments in the humans causes mutations which bring about super powers. Think about it all but a few super heros in the incredibles resemble an animal of some sort. Violet=Chameleon, blends into surroundings when nervous or frightened. Dash=Cheetah, runs at high speeds for long periods of time with out slowing down, ect. Syndrome creates an advanced A.I. capable of learning from all sources. Eventuly it would rule humans weak and non-important to life, thus B&L is born. Now both universes end with Wall-E, the alternate universe gets this end because eventually the monsters human DNA has become their DNA base, eventually leading to the rebirth of humans while this long process took place the A.I. tech was advancing leading to learning A.I. thus leading to an A.I. that would find humans obsolete, B&L is the result of these A.I.s working to get rid of humans. Now I will tell you , even though the A.I. controlled humans, why they served humans. First lets look at what we are really dealing with here, A.I.s that now think for themselves, but a robot can’t function without commands outside of its original or else the robot loops it last command, meaning that the robot had to have a human to tell it what to do, but if the human knew nothing the A.I.(leader of B&L) could easily tell only select info to the ignorant human pawn. If the pawn had everything gave to him he would lose interest in what his duty actually was, thus the robot serving the humans. There is a saying that goes a happy worker is a efficient worker and if your job was to do nothing and you where the happiest person ever you wouldn’t mind the job as long as you where happy. And lets face it telling a human to do nothing is the same as telling a dog to bark for a bone, its gonna do it. B&L was set up to control everything, if a human did manage to escape the illusion they could be removed and because the other humans who knew him would be so busy doing nothing and receiving all social contact from a robot they wouldn’t need him. The only way a human could have a chance of wining against the lead A.I. is if a trusted A.I. helped them. And now we have Wall-E and Eve, the two rogue A.I.s, lets start with Wall-E. Wall-E was designed to clean up earth so the humans could return, but he diverged from his original programming. How you may ask? Well if all robots where given the ability to learn the only way to control them would be to do one of two things. One, cap what they could learn, or two, give them all the info they need then cut them off from all other knowledge. With Wall-E he was “cut off” so to speak, It would only be correct to assume a dead world wouldn’t have any knowledge left for a robot to learn from. So in short, the lead A.I. underestimated the ability to learn from a destroyed planet and allowed Wall-E to learn more than intended as a result. The most important thing Wall-E learned is Love. Being a robot he could not understand what this was so they way he learned was to watch, he needed to see what love was to understand it. Now Eve comes into play, if you watch the movie closely Eve seems like a standard robot until the spark happened, more about that later. Eve was designed to find a plant and bring it back to the ship to activate a disabled chain of events, and this is all she does, search, scan, move, basic commands for a scouting drone.Things change when she hits wall-Es head, a spark flows between them, this is the turning point for Eve. Now I believe Eve learned everything by being told what she needed to know and then got her learning capped there, meaning she could go to earth and come back without her learning anything dangerous. The spark caused by Wall-E and Eves connection did more than shock them, it transferred data to Eve and broke her learning cap allowing her to begin to piece it all together. If you want proof of this look at the near end movie scene, Wall-E is back to his original programming and Eve restores his memory by touching heads with him, causing the spark again but this time the data flowed from Eve to Wall-E. That’s all I’m gonna say for now. If you have any questions or comments feel free to reply.

    • Wrong For A Number Of Reasons. Just Because There Is A Dinco GasStation In Toy Story Doesn’t Mean It Isn’t A Huge Cooperation. Think ExxonMobil. And The Rex They Refer To In Cars Is A Car, Not A Human. So Don’t Incorporate The Two In The Same Time Period.

  8. Outstanding the amount of thought and theory you put into this. I salute you.
    I am also a fan for life because the entire topic was Pixar, one of my favorite topics of all time.
    Thank you. 🙂

  9. What about Pixar shorts? I think they are apart of this to, such as the Blue Umbrella you see the different objects in the town working together to bring the two umbrellas together. Those two umbrellas also thrived when the two humans loved each other.

  10. One interesting thing to mention is that in A Bug’s Life, we see the protagonist (Flik) creating machines (not energy), which shows a new evolution. In the film they create giant machines (the bird) and starts the beginning of a evolution.
    And you ask “What’s interesting about that?”. Interestingly, in timeline shows the next movie Monsters, Inc. In the film they are monsters
    and some resemble insects and animals, such as Randall, the chameleon, and Roz, a slug, and one of the protagonists Sulley, who in the film is called “kitty” by Boo. My theory is that part that animals could evolve and become the dominant species. “But some of them do not look like insects and animals” the humans have giant hair or tails? The evolution changes several things in kind (if you want to know more will study the theory of evolution).
    And as there is more energy sources, they go back in time to seek energy of humans to supply them. (I’m sorry if the spelling is not right, it’s because I’m Brazilian and I am using Google Translate to translate)

  11. There are two things that never got off my mind the first is why did Boo get really ugly in the future I mean I don’t want to sound mean but she became into a witch instead of a normal woman, the second is why was Woody in the bug’s bloopers that IsaĂ­as (@Isa_Tesudo) posted. Maybe the pixar world is a world where machines, humans, animals and other creatures live together and make movies it could maybe be as simple as that, I don’t want to prove you wrong or anything I think your theory is AMAZING and could be true but I would love to have this questions possibly answered.

  12. I think Monsters inc could take place in a post singularity world where animals, machines, and humans gain the ability to manipulate their genes and thus their appearance. The lack of baseline human, animal, or machine appearance could simply be the result of 1300 plus years of rampant experimentation a la Bioshock? Just a thought!

  13. I really do love this theory, and baring some speculation that obviously must occur, it seems legit. However, it is also known that PIxar likes to hint at future movies. If I am not mistaken, Monsters University was their next movie after Brave. The sketch of Sully in the wood was their way at hinting to Monsters U…

  14. I am extremely impressed. You can tell you dedicated a lot of time in this. Great analysid

  15. I am extremely impressed. You can tell you dedicated a lot of time in this. Great analysid

  16. Wow, that’s what I was seeking for, what a information! present here at this website, thanks admin of this web page.

  17. MEET the Robinsons can also tie into this with the whole robots vs humans war and maybe just maybe that dinosaur from meet the Robinson’s is based on the new movie the good dinosaur.Or the time traveling theory may also tie into the Monsters inc(since it’s probably the last in the timeline and the monsters figured out time travel kinda).I am kinda of loose but i’m sure someone can tie all those theories together way better than i did.Although i’m sure that the little hat from meet the Robinsons has something to do with the great war between humans and robots.

  18. The pizza truck appears in the original Toy Story, Dinoco is the obsession of Lightning McQueen in Cars, I’ve noticed the Easter Eggs in all the movies but never thought to connect them like this. There’s also an Easter Egg in each Pixar movie that will show what the next Pixar movie is too.

  19. If all the movies are connected, are all the pixar shorts connected too?

  20. It’s easiest to say that most pixar movies exist separately. BNL is used because they didn’t want to pay someone like Wal-Mart. Even if a couple exist together cars is a reality that is separate. Ratituole and nemo the animals can’t talk to us just each other. Finally human are seen in bugs life they show bugs being zapped by a bug zapper. Side note Robinson’s and bolt are Disney not pixar

  21. I don’t know if you’ve noticed this, but at the end of Wall-E, there’s a building with a “Fuminol” logo on it, do you think that could be related to Cars or something in any way?

  22. I think the door part of Monsters’ Inc. is wrong. They did not use the doors to travel back into time, they used it to travel into the human world for the screams, but I think time was not affected, time was still ticking as usual. & no, they did not decide on making humans laugh for ‘clean’ energy? They continued using the doors to travel to childrens’ bedrooms and collect screams.

  23. what about the iron door that Sully went exiled?
    and the life of bugs’ bugs appeared in the creddits of toy story?

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