

Despite the straight-forward plot – the Toaster (Deanna Oliver) convinces the Lamp (Timothy Stack), the Radio (Jon Lovitz), the Blanket (Timothy E. There’s something sad about this movie, almost hopeless, even with its uplifting ending. I do remembered enjoying the music from it, though.ĭOES IT HOLD UP: Watching it now, it’s a whole new experience. I got a “half-assed” vibe from it akin to the strange feeling you get while watching the “Squiggle-vision” of “Dr. Something about the animation, I recall, seemed to bother me as well. I never watched it all the way through, so I had trouble following the story. NOSTALGIC LENS: I always would catch this movie on the Disney Channel at some random point in the middle of it. It lacks the “Disney” charm that the company is known for, and the animation itself is a little unrefined, something you usually don’t get out of Disney animated films of the early 80s and 90s. It’s a weird movie, in idea and in execution a stretch so far out there that the movie had failed to find a distributor after its release. It’s for kids, but we’ll make it just creepy and awkward enough to freak them out.” How do you pitch a movie like this? “So, there’s this toaster, who breaks out of a cabin, and she (it’s a she, did I mention that?) and her appliance-companions go on a wild adventure to find their master.

Starring: Deanna Oliver, Jon Lovitz, Timothy Stack, Timothy E.
