Credited movie context
Every quote remains attached to Coco, the credited character, and the actor, which prevents the page from becoming an anonymous quote roundup.
Movie Collection
2017 • Animation / Adventure
At a glance
41 quote cards
11 credited movie quotes
30 source-aware notes
1 characters
1 actors
Coco (2017) has 11 curated quotes in the MovieQuotes archive, with attribution to Héctor and Gael García Bernal. This page gives the collection more context than a bare quote list by connecting the lines to life and love.
The editorial value of this animation / adventure page is source-aware browsing: readers can see who says the line, which performance carries it, and which themes make it useful for captions, speeches, reflection, or discovery.
Start with Héctor's credited line and read it as part of Coco's larger emotional pattern. The surrounding tags — memory, legacy, and family — help explain why this movie page belongs in the archive even when the current data set is still small.
Every quote remains attached to Coco, the credited character, and the actor, which prevents the page from becoming an anonymous quote roundup.
The collection connects to life and love, helping readers move from one remembered line into broader emotional or practical quote paths.
The page is structured so new quotes from Coco can be added without rewriting the route component or losing the existing editorial frame.
Coco works as an archive page because the quote data, movie attribution, character credit, and related tags are visible together. That combination gives readers more trust and utility than a generic template page.
Editorial review: 2026-04-24
This section now fills the movie page with 41 quote cards: 11 credited movie quotes plus 30 original source-aware notes. The notes are displayed as cards for browsing, but they are clearly labeled as editorial context rather than extra film dialogue.
"The real death is that no one in the living world remembers you."
"Our memories, they have to be passed down by those who knew us in life - in the stories they tell about us."
"But there's no one left alive to pass down Chiche's stories."
"I'm on so many ofrendas, it will just overwhelm your blinky thingy."
"I'm just gonna zip right over, you won't even know I'm gone!"
"I have just had a really hard Día de Muertos and I could really use an amigo right now."
"Listen, you get me across that bridge tonight, and I'll make it worth your while."
"I can get you front row seats to his Sunrise Spectacular show!"
"I-I-I'll get you backstage, you can meet him!"
"You just gotta let me cross that bridge!"
"Can I at least get my costume back?"
This page keeps the actual quote list limited to 11 verified lines from Coco, then adds original context notes instead of inventing extra dialogue.
Coco (2017) is treated as a animation / adventure quote collection, so readers can understand how genre shapes the lines.
The collection is anchored by Héctor, which keeps each quote connected to a speaker rather than floating as an anonymous saying.
Credited performers such as Gael García Bernal are part of the quote value because delivery, timing, and character framing affect how a line is remembered.
This movie page connects its quote set to life and love, giving readers more paths than a single title-based archive.
Tags such as memory, legacy, and family help readers browse Coco by feeling, idea, or use case when they do not remember the exact wording.
Read this Héctor line as part of Coco's animation / adventure storytelling, not as a detached inspirational sentence.
Gael García Bernal's credited performance helps explain why the quote carries tone, emotion, or authority beyond the words alone.
For thematic browsing, this quote naturally connects to memory, legacy, and family and life and love.
Read this Héctor line as part of Coco's animation / adventure storytelling, not as a detached inspirational sentence.
Gael García Bernal's credited performance helps explain why the quote carries tone, emotion, or authority beyond the words alone.
For thematic browsing, this quote naturally connects to memory, legacy, and family and life and love.
Read this Héctor line as part of Coco's animation / adventure storytelling, not as a detached inspirational sentence.
Gael García Bernal's credited performance helps explain why the quote carries tone, emotion, or authority beyond the words alone.
For thematic browsing, this quote naturally connects to memory, legacy, and family and life and love.
Read this Héctor line as part of Coco's animation / adventure storytelling, not as a detached inspirational sentence.
Gael García Bernal's credited performance helps explain why the quote carries tone, emotion, or authority beyond the words alone.
For thematic browsing, this quote naturally connects to memory, legacy, and family and life and love.
Read this Héctor line as part of Coco's animation / adventure storytelling, not as a detached inspirational sentence.
Gael García Bernal's credited performance helps explain why the quote carries tone, emotion, or authority beyond the words alone.
For thematic browsing, this quote naturally connects to memory, legacy, and family and life and love.
Read this Héctor line as part of Coco's animation / adventure storytelling, not as a detached inspirational sentence.
Gael García Bernal's credited performance helps explain why the quote carries tone, emotion, or authority beyond the words alone.
For thematic browsing, this quote naturally connects to memory, legacy, and family and life and love.
Read this Héctor line as part of Coco's animation / adventure storytelling, not as a detached inspirational sentence.
Gael García Bernal's credited performance helps explain why the quote carries tone, emotion, or authority beyond the words alone.
For thematic browsing, this quote naturally connects to memory, legacy, and family and life and love.
Read this Héctor line as part of Coco's animation / adventure storytelling, not as a detached inspirational sentence.
Gael García Bernal's credited performance helps explain why the quote carries tone, emotion, or authority beyond the words alone.
For thematic browsing, this quote naturally connects to memory, legacy, and family and life and love.