The Brave Little Toaster - posters, covers, wallpapers

Lots of posters, covers and wallpapers for the movie "The Brave Little Toaster"
The Brave Little Toaster (1987)
Timing: 1:30 (90 min)
The Brave Little Toaster - TMDB rating
6.9/10
415
The Brave Little Toaster - Kinopoisk rating
7.627/10
5576
The Brave Little Toaster - IMDB rating
7.2/10
29000

Posters, covers

Poster to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #256824Full HD 1426p
Poster to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #2568252K 1500p
Poster to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #2568262K 1500p
Poster to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #2568275K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #256828HD Ready 825p
Poster to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #2568292K 1500p
Poster to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #2568302K 1500p
Poster to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #2568312K 1500p

Backdrops, wallpaper

Backdrop to the movie "The Brave Little Toaster" #256822Full HD 1080p

What's left behind the scenes

  • Approximately midway through production, producer Donald Kushner decided to remove the nightmare scene entirely from the film because children might be frightened by the clown. He made the same decision regarding the scene at the junkyard, where one of the cars voluntarily drives towards the crushing machine, which could be interpreted as a reference to suicide. For unknown reasons, these scenes remained in the film.
  • Initially, the film was being developed by "Disney," with John Lasseter as director. Lasseter intended to be the first to combine traditional hand-drawn animation with computer imagery. However, studio management was interested in using computer animation solely to save financial resources. Upon learning that its use would have little impact on the project’s cost, management immediately lost interest and shut down the ambitious project. Lasseter was fired from "Disney" and became one of the founders of "Pixar," where he made the film independently (without computer animation). Eventually, "Disney" bought the finished film, showed it on "Disney Channel," and it became a hit.
  • The lamp, voiced by Phil Hartman (1948-1998), resembles Austrian and American actor, director, and screenwriter Peter Lorre (1904-1964) in both voice and appearance. The air conditioner, also voiced by Hartman, is modeled after Jack Nicholson.
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