Hey, kids! Turns out you've got an unwelcome friend in John Cusack!

Walt Disney Home Video is scrambling to recall some of its just-released Toy Story 2 DVDs, after it found out the G-rated blockbuster was accidentally duplicated to include an expletive-filled clip from the R-rated flick High Fidelity.

Viewers reportedly discovered the glitch in the three-disc "Ultimate Toy Box Collector's Edition," a set released Tuesday that includes the Toy Story films and an additional disc with behind-the-scenes goodies and commentary from director John Lasseter.

But there was an added bonus: During Toy Story 2, just as viewers get all weepy with cowgirl Jessie (Joan Cusack) and her heartfelt musical interlude, the film, according to one DVD owner, cuts to a clip from High Fidelity, which stars Cusack's brother, John.

"First, none of the supplemental material would play, and my DVD player would register a disc error," writes the viewer, Paul Naas, in a posting to AnimationArtist.com. "So we decided to watch the movie, and right after Jessie's song, Toy Story 2 stopped playing and we were dropped into the middle of High Fidelity, just in time to hear some character use the 'F' word twice in 15 seconds."

Quick, somebody cover Woody's ears!

Adds Naas: "After one clear scene, High Fidelity continued with so much video noise that the characters looked like they were in the video witness-protection program."

Technological error, or bizarre plot to merge all of the Cusack siblings? You decide.

Disney, for its part, declined to comment on the snafu, saying only that it was "a duplication error." Technicolor, which was responsible for the duplication, released a statement saying "the problem exists only in a small percentage of the three-disc DVD packages and is limited to a specific isolated region of the United States."

Sources at Disney say the two films were duplicated in the same bundle, thus the technological error and the subsequent recall. The DVDs, they say, appear only to have been shipped to Costco stores in the Midwest, and they insist just a handful of discs were affected. "Duplication errors like this happen all the time," says one source. "It's a tiny problem."

It's a minor setback for a disc that will no doubt debut on or near the top of the video and DVD sales and rental charts next week. The films, starring the voices of Tom Hanks and Tim Allen, have built a lucrative computer-animated franchise for Disney and its partner, Pixar Animation Studios. Toy Story 2, released last year, has grossed more than $246 million at the box office in the U.S. alone.