Pixar has been wowing audiences with its groundbreaking animated shorts since the late '80s, often spearheaded by CEO John Lasseter.
The studio's latest feature film "Coco" skipped the traditional Pixar short and opted for a far less popular "Frozen" holiday featurette from Disney Animation Studios. Nonetheless, let's take a look back at all the highly successful Pixar shorts through the ages.
Keep reading to see how each Pixar's shorts rank when compared to one another.
SEE ALSO: Pixar wins again with 'Coco,' which is beautifully told and culturally conscious
19. "The Adventures of André and Wally B." (1984)
Made in 1984, while "Pixar" was still a division at LucasFilm called The Graphics Group, this short was revolutionary for its time. But the brief story of André being woken up by a bee, running away, and then getting stung by said bee, doesn't hold up to the storytelling standards Pixar would later set.
18. "Red's Dream" (1987)
Another of John Lasseter's earliest animated works, "Red's Dream" tells the melancholy story of an anthropomorphized unicycle who dreams of juggling in the circus. Though this short has the early inklings of Pixar's knack for drawing emotions from inanimate objects, the creepy clown detracts from its appeal all these years later.
17. "The Blue Umbrella" (2013)
This is one of Pixar's least-memorable shorts, though the animation of two colorful umbrellas in a sea of black is gorgeous. But the boy-meets-girl trope is overwrought. Pixar has proven its team is capable of more originality than the tale of two umbrellas falling in love.
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