HomeEntertainmentMoviesInside Out 2 Review: Pixar’s Animated Adventure Hits The Right Emotional Notes, But Isn’t As Fun As Its Predecessor

Inside Out 2 Review: Pixar’s Animated Adventure Hits The Right Emotional Notes, But Isn’t As Fun As Its Predecessor

With Riley entering her teenage phase, the older emotions—Joy, Anger, Sadness, Fear and Disgust are replaced by Anxiety, Boredom, Envy and Embarrassment. There’s also Nostalgia (portrayed as a nanny) who appears randomly, much like the fleeting emotion itself.

June 16, 2024 / 13:35 IST
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Inside out
Inside out 2

It is a good thing no one can see you cry in 3D glasses because Inside Out 2 struck an emotional chord with this critic. When an orange-coloured Anxiety (Maya Hawke) was introduced, I was a bit skeptical where director Kelsey Mann would go with this emotion. Why, you ask? Because the entire plot of the film is based on Joy (Amy Poehler) locking horns with Anxiety in order to regain the control of Riley’s mind. It becomes rather convenient, therefore, to label Anxiety as the ‘bad guy’.

Inside Out 2 Overview

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I was pleasantly surprised when in the film’s penultimate scene, Anxiety says “Joy, I am sorry. I was trying to protect Riley”. Then, Joy gives anxiety a massage chair and some tea to calm her down. Demonizing anxiety is a mistake not just storytellers but those suffering with this mental illness often make. In reality, anxiety is the part of you which wants to protect you by imagining all possible worst case scenarios.

Inside Out 2 portrays this complex idea with perfection. Anxiety runs a covert operation in “Imagination land” where it asks its minions to conjure the worst possible scenarios to protect Riley from potential ruin. Meanwhile, Joy fills up Riley’s mind with only positive memories, sending all the bad memories to “back of the mind” — therefore suppressing them, leading to a somewhat unstable sense of self.