Inside Out for £5 and other Pixar iTunes bargains

By , on August 1, 2016

Inside Out is currently available to buy for just £5 on iTunes, though the offer won't be around for much longer.

Fortunately, there are bunch of great iTunes deals on Pixar films right now. Here are some of our favourites.

And if you're asking the question 'what's Pixar?' then shame on you! Pixar is the legendary computer animation studio owned by Disney, which has been responsible for some of the very best computer-generated movies ever made.

Including these six...

Inside Out

Inside out

As I've already made reference to, Inside Out is currently available to buy in HD on iTunes for just £4.99. Snap it up quickly, because there are many who reckon this is Pixar's best ever film. It's certainly one of the studio's most ambitious efforts, offering a glimpse at the emotional workings of a young girl's brain as she moves with her family to a new city.

The Incredibles

Incredibles

Any conversation about the best Pixar film has to include this 2004 effort. The Incredibles predicted the current superhero craze with its focus on a golden age comic book world where the extraordinary becomes ordinary. Where it really strikes gold is in the seamlessly blends in the dynamics of a not-so-average American family, as well as a slick '60s spy series aesthetic.

Ratatouille

Ratatouille

While it's easy to overlook the charms of this film for Pixar's more epic, grand-scale offerings, for my money Ratatouille is right up there with the very best. It tells the tale of Remy, a rat living on the dirty streets of Paris, who gets the taste for fine food and decides to show off his culinary skills in a failing restaurant.

Up

Up

One of Pixar's most disjointed films, Up has entered the cinematic vernacular for its stunning opening montage and iconic image of a rickety old house hanging from thousands of helium balloons. Unfortunately the rest of the film can't quite live up to those lofty elements, but it's still a thoroughly enjoyable slice of family entertainment.

WALL-E

Wall-E

Another firm favourite, WALL-E is Pixar doing sci-fi, with all of the neat references and epic set pieces you would expect. WALL-E is a humble trash compactor robot tasked with cleaning up an impossibly polluted Earth while the remnants of humanity grow fat and lazy on a permanent space-cruise vacation. It all kicks off when evidence of terrestrial life emerges, and WALL-E is pulled into a fight for the future of humanity.

Finding Nemo

Neo

With Finding Dory currently out in cinemas, now would be a good time to revisit its 2003 predecessor, Finding Nemo. It tells the story of a little clownfish with an underdeveloped fin who leaves the safety of his reef and gets scooped up by a scuba diver. The result combines a classic road movie (except, you know, in the sea), as Nemo's father sets out to rescue him, with an escape movie as Nemo himself attempts to break out of his 'prison' with the help of an unlikely gang of fellow inmates.