The video game was one thing, but when the real thing (er.toy) is accidentally released from his packaging, he immediately seeks out Buzz Lightyear so he can kill him. She hovers around Slinky and even picks up Rex at one point (you can even see the latter's eyes shift and bulge terrified), though they avoid their fate. Even worse when it actually happens in the third movie. All these toys can do is stand and wait as she glances around them, it already established they are terrified of being put in the sale and taken from all their friends. It's more a mundane case, but the suspense as Andy's mom comes to take toys for the yard sale.
Later in the movie, Jessie is trapped in the green suitcase and is unable to get out before falling down the compartment slide and loaded onto the plane. When Woody reveals he doesn't intend to go to Japan with the rest of the gang, Jessie starts freaking out, hyperventilating and stroking her braid. Jessie's fear of the dark (or at least being put back into storage) is frighteningly realistic.Sure, it's a video game, and not the real Buzz, but it's still unsettling. Buzz's Family-Unfriendly Death at the beginning of the film, where he gets disintegrated from the waist up by Emperor Zurg.Also in the original storyboard version, Andy stares at the camera with those glassy lifeless eyes.The original storyboard version adds an extra cryptic touch, when Woody first calls out to the other toys, they seemingly ignore him, or alternatively fail to notice him, foreshadowing the nightmarish fear he is not considered a working toy anymore.
What's worse, certain foreign dubs of the movie distort Andy's voice the moment he drops Woody to make it sound demonic, which coupled with his Uncanny Valley stance makes it look like the poor child is possessed.
And when he says "Bye Woody" and looks at him one last time before closing the trash can, the lighting and shading of his face make him look almost like something straight out of The Ring. What makes it even worse is that this stare isn't looking at Woody. The moment he doesn't want Woody anymore, he starts speaking in a creepy monotone and has a glassy, lifeless stare that is truly unnerving.