
The dead are never truly gone. Not as long as someone still remembers them.
Pixar's Coco is one of the most emotionally complete films the studio has ever made — a dazzling, marigold-drenched journey through the Land of the Dead that somehow manages to be simultaneously the most joyful and the most quietly devastating thing about family, memory and what it means to be remembered. Miguel, a twelve-year-old boy who wants nothing more than to play music in a family that has banned it entirely, stumbles into the afterlife on Día de Muertos and discovers that the truth about his family is considerably more complicated — and more beautiful — than anyone told him.
The film is a love letter to Mexican culture, to the Día de Muertos tradition, to the idea that our ancestors are present as long as we carry them with us. Its visual language — the towers of coloured buildings, the bridge of marigold petals, the luminous skeletons of the departed — is unlike anything else in animation. And Remember Me, in all its iterations, should not work as hard as it does. And yet.
Our Coco collection brings together officially licensed gifts, figures, accessories and keepsakes for fans of Miguel, Héctor, and the family that waited across two worlds.
Nunca te olvidaré. Never forgotten.






