IMDb RATING
6.2/10
5.7K
YOUR RATING
Buzz Lightyear must battle Emperor Zurg with the help of three hopefuls who insist on being his partners.Buzz Lightyear must battle Emperor Zurg with the help of three hopefuls who insist on being his partners.Buzz Lightyear must battle Emperor Zurg with the help of three hopefuls who insist on being his partners.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Tim Allen
- Buzz Lightyear
- (voice)
Nicole Sullivan
- Mira Nova
- (voice)
Larry Miller
- XR
- (voice)
Stephen Furst
- Booster
- (voice)
Wayne Knight
- Zurg
- (voice)
Adam Carolla
- Commander Nebula
- (voice)
Diedrich Bader
- Warp Darkmatter
- (voice)
- …
Patrick Warburton
- LGM
- (voice)
Cindy Warden
- Technician
- (voice)
- …
Frank Welker
- Grubs
- (voice)
- …
Sean Hayes
- Brain Pod #13
- (voice)
- (as Sean P. Hayes)
Andrew Stanton
- Hamm
- (voice)
R. Lee Ermey
- Sarge
- (voice)
Wallace Shawn
- Rex
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsWhen X-R enters the conference room to propose a negotiation plan, there is a blonde female Ranger behind him whose ponytail disappears. In the next cut, her ponytail is back again.
- Quotes
Evil Emperor Zurg: If you want something turned evil, turn it evil yourself. That's what Nana Zurg always used to say to me, and she was plenty evil.
- Alternate versionsWhen the movie was serialized in Buzz Lightyear of Star Command (2000), Tim Allen's lines were replaced by the original vocal tracks of Patrick Warburton, who plays Buzz on the series.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Best Straight to DVD Disney Sequels (2016)
- SoundtracksTo Infinity and Beyond
Written by Fred LaBour
Performed by William Shatner and the Star Command Chorus
Featured review
In a web interview a few years ago, one of the head honchos at Pixar was asked the secret to making a successful kids' movie and he said it was to make something that adults will enjoy. Kids, he said, have terrible taste; they'll will watch anything. A kids' movie that is too dumb for the grown-ups is going to languish at the box office. But if you make a movie with some clever dialogue and engaging plot, plus some elementary "teaching moments" that mainstream parents can discuss with their kids, then you will enjoy robust ticket and video sales.
Pixar put that formula to good use with their successful run of computer-animated films, but I am hesitant to watch anything released direct to video. But I was pleasantly surprised with Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins.
There's more "kids' stuff" here than in Toy Story and its progeny, but there's still plenty for adults to love. The voice talents are top-flight, especially Wayne Knight as Zurg. (Kudos also go to Stephen Furst, Adam Corolla and Larry Miller, all of whom seemed to be enjoying themselves and working their roles well.) Besides the voices, the film also offers some clever dialogue and good visual humor (picture a lazy robot reading a catalogue called "Victoria's Circuits"). The plot is competent. Good themes (like valuing teamwork and obeying the rules even when you don't like it) give the kids something to think about.
Finally, William Shatner shows up in the end credits with a laugh-out-loud spoken rendition of the Buzz Lightyear theme song: "To Infinity and Beyond." I had a good time explaining to my nephews and my son about Shatner's infamous "Lucy In the Sky (With Diamonds)" recording.
I'd like to see Pixar make more stuff like this.
Pixar put that formula to good use with their successful run of computer-animated films, but I am hesitant to watch anything released direct to video. But I was pleasantly surprised with Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins.
There's more "kids' stuff" here than in Toy Story and its progeny, but there's still plenty for adults to love. The voice talents are top-flight, especially Wayne Knight as Zurg. (Kudos also go to Stephen Furst, Adam Corolla and Larry Miller, all of whom seemed to be enjoying themselves and working their roles well.) Besides the voices, the film also offers some clever dialogue and good visual humor (picture a lazy robot reading a catalogue called "Victoria's Circuits"). The plot is competent. Good themes (like valuing teamwork and obeying the rules even when you don't like it) give the kids something to think about.
Finally, William Shatner shows up in the end credits with a laugh-out-loud spoken rendition of the Buzz Lightyear theme song: "To Infinity and Beyond." I had a good time explaining to my nephews and my son about Shatner's infamous "Lucy In the Sky (With Diamonds)" recording.
I'd like to see Pixar make more stuff like this.
- Ted-Striker
- Nov 16, 2006
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Movie
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 10 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content