Porsche brought three cars to the Goodwood Festival of Speed 2026 that nobody was ready for. Inspired by Toy Story 5, these aren’t show cars with stickers slapped on — each one is a genuine one-off built through the Sonderwunsch program, and the whole trio has already been sold to a single private buyer for $3 million.
The showstopper is the 911 GT3 RS done up as Buzz Lightyear. The white body is layered with Lizard Green and purple accents, and that massive rear wing has been styled to echo Buzz’s deploying space wings. The white magnesium wheels get special “Space Ranger” center caps, and the tires themselves are branded “Lightyear.” Inside, the theme continues with white trim, green inserts, and Buzz-inspired details.
The 911 Carrera T, dedicated to Woody, looks quieter at first — but the closer you look, the more it reveals. The blue paint mimics denim texture, the lower body is finished in Coffee Black, gold accents were added, and the custom wheels carry sheriff-star center caps with Woody’s graphic on the doors.
Inside, there’s vintage brown leather, denim seat inserts, red checkered accents, and the line “Ride Like the Wind!” Even the six-speed manual’s shift knob got a Pixar ball-shaped topper.
The third car is the 911 Targa 4 GTS in Jessie’s style. The body is finished in pearlescent Jessie White Metallic, the lower section in 944 Cobalt Blue Metallic, with Atacama Yellow accents and GTS Red stripes. The red Targa roof is a direct nod to Jessie’s cowboy hat.
Inside — denim, floor mats with a cowhide print, contrast leather, and illuminated sill plates reading “YEE HAW!” Even the classic Targa script was swapped for “Jessie.” And here’s the punchline: all three cars were sold as a single lot for $3 million. The proceeds went to Big Brothers Big Sisters of America, the American Red Cross, and the Starlight Children’s Foundation.
For Porsche, projects like this matter just as much as another power-boosted special edition. The brand is leaning harder into rarity, personalization, and expensive bespoke commissions. When a company wants to build fewer cars but earn more from each one, Sonderwunsch stops being a decorative option and becomes a profit center in its own right.
These 911s aren’t interesting because they replay Pixar characters. They’re interesting because they show exactly how far Porsche will go when a buyer isn’t just paying for speed — but for a story that can never be ordered twice.