What if Walt Disney was the producer of Looney Tunes/Walt Disney Animated Classics/Inside Out

Inside Out is a 1991 American animated comedy-drama film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and released by Walt Disney Pictures. The film was directed by Ron Clements and John Musker, with a screenplay written by Clements, Musker, Don Bluth and Howard Ashman. The film is set in the mind of a young girl named Riley Andersen (Natalie Gregory), where five personified emotions—Joy (Tress MacNellie), Sadness (Kath Souise), Anger (Danny DeVito), Fear (Jesse Corti) and Disgust (Susan Egan)—try to lead her through life as her parents (Christopher Daniel Barnes and Jodi Benson) move from Minnesota to San Francisco, and she has to adjust to her new surroundings.

Clements and Musker first began developing Inside Out in 1980, after Walt Disney telling about changes in his daughter's personality as she grew older. The film's producers consulted numerous psychologists who helped revise the story by emphasizing the neuropsychological findings that human emotions affect interpersonal relationships and can be significantly moderated by them.

After premiering at the Cannes Film Festival on May 18, 1991 Inside Out was released in North America on June 19, 1991. Critics praised the film's concept, screenplay, subject matter, Michael Giacchino's (in his debut) musical score, and the vocal performances, particularly those of MacNeillie and Soucie. The film grossed $90.4 million in its first weekend, making it one of the most successful animated films at the time.

Plot
Riley Andersen is born in Minnesota and within her mind, five personifications of her basic emotions—Joy, Sadness, Fear, Disgust, and Anger—gradually come to life and influence her actions via a console in her mind's Headquarters. As she grows up, her experiences become memories, stored in colored orbs, with each color corresponding to an emotion, which are sent into long-term memory each night. Her five most important "core memories" (all of which are happy ones) are housed in a hub; each powers an aspect of her personality which takes the form of floating islands. In the Headquarters, Joy acts as a de facto leader to maintain Riley's cheerful childhood, but since she and the other emotions do not understand Sadness' purpose, she frequently tries to keep Sadness away from the console.

At the age of 11, Riley and her parents move to San Francisco for her father's new business. Riley has poor first experiences: the new house is cramped and old, the moving van with all their belongings is misdirected, her father is under stress from his business, and a poor encounter at a pizza restaurant leaves her disheartened. When Sadness begins touching Riley's happy memories, turning them sad, Joy tries to guard them by isolating her. On Riley's first day at her new school, Sadness accidentally causes Riley to cry in front of her class, creating a sad core memory. Joy, panicking, tries to dispose of it, but accidentally knocks the other core memories loose during a struggle with Sadness, deactivating the personality islands. Joy, Sadness, and the core memories are sucked out of Headquarters and taken to the maze-like storage area of long-term memory.

The other emotions, Anger, Fear, and Disgust try to maintain Riley's happiness in Joy's absence with disastrous results, distancing her from her parents (whom she fought over at dinner), friends, and hobbies (she stormed off during a hockey trial due to her subpar performance). As a result, her personality islands gradually crumble and fall, one by one, into the "Memory Dump", an abyss where memories are forgotten. In desperation, Anger inserts an idea into the console, prompting Riley to run away, believing that her returning to Minnesota will enable her to make new happy core memories.

While navigating through the long-term memory region, Joy and Sadness encounter Bing Bong, Riley's long-forgotten childhood imaginary friend, who suggests riding the train of thought back to Headquarters. En route to the train station, Bing Bong tearfully watches his rainbow wagon rocket being thrown into the memory dump along with other childish artifacts which are out of use as Sadness consoles him and gets him up on his feet by sympathizing his loss, which astonishes Joy. The three eventually catch the train, but it is halted when Riley falls asleep. They succeed in manipulating Riley's dreams to wake her and restart the train, but it is derailed when the "Honesty Island" collapses (when Riley steals her mother's credit card and begins to run away). In desperation, Joy tries to ride a "recall tube" back to Headquarters, but abandons Sadness since close proximity to Sadness will cause the core memories to turn sad, which Joy believes will hurt Riley. But as she takes off, the ground below the tube collapses, breaking the tube and plunging Joy and Bing Bong into the Memory Dump. At the bottom of the abyss, Joy begins to lose hope and breaks into tears, but comes to a realization when she discovers a sad memory of an ice hockey game that turned happy when Riley's parents and friends comforted her. Joy realizes that Sadness serves an important purpose: to induce empathy in others, prompting them to reach out to Riley when she is emotionally overwhelmed and needs help.

Joy and Bing Bong try to use Bing Bong's old wagon rocket to escape the Memory Dump. After several tries, Bing Bong realizes their combined weight is too much and jumps out to allow Joy to escape; having sacrificed himself, Bing Bong fades away completely. In the meantime, Riley bought a one-way bus ticket to Minnesota while her parents grew increasingly worried over her disappearance. Joy reunites with a despondent Sadness and manages to get them to Headquarters, only to discover that Anger's idea has disabled the console, rendering Riley apathetic. To the surprise of the others, Joy hands control of the console to Sadness, who is able to successfully extract the idea, reactivating the console and prompting Riley to alight from the bus and to return home.

As Sadness re-installs the core memories, turning them sad, Riley arrives home to her parents and tearfully confesses that she misses Minnesota and her old life. As her parents comfort her, they emotionally admit they, too, miss Minnesota as much as she does. Joy and Sadness work the console together, creating a new amalgamated bitter-sweet core memory in Riley's Headquarters; a new island forms, representing Riley's acceptance of her new life in San Francisco. A year later at the age of 12, Riley has adapted to her new home, made new friends, returned to her old hobbies while adopting a few new ones, fueled by new, more nuanced core memories from combinations of her emotions. Inside the Headquarters, her emotions all work together on a newly expanded console with room for them all, allowing Riley to lead a more emotionally complex life.

Cast

 * Tress MacNellie as Joy
 * Kath Souice as Sadness
 * Gabriel Damon as Jordan
 * Susan Egan as Disgust
 * Jesse Corti as Fear
 * Danny DeVito as Anger
 * Natalie Gregory as Riley Andersen
 * Jodi Benson as Riley's Mom
 * Christopher Daniel Barnes as Riley's Dad
 * Jim Cummings as Additional Anger Dialogue, Jangles the Clown and Dream Production Director and Dream Production Crew Member No. 01 and Dream Production Crew Member No. 02 and Mind Worker No. 02 and Fritz
 * Martin Short as Bing Bong and Dream Production Crew Member No. 03
 * Florence Stanley as Forgetter No. 02
 * Charlie Adler as Forgetter No. 1 and Bartholomew and Subconscious Guard No. 01 and Mind Worker No. 03 and Mind Worker No. 02 and Dream Production Crew Member No. 04
 * Cheech Marin as Subconscious Guard No. 02 and Mind Worker No. 04 and Mind Worker No. 05 and Dream Production Crew Member No. 05
 * Will Ryan as Dream Production Crew Member No. 06 and Mind Worker No. 07
 * Paul Winchell as Dream Production Crew Member No. 07 and Mind Worker No. 07