Halloween Costume Guide
Canada’s greatest daredevil toy, voiced by Keanu Reeves, and yes, he poses before doing anything.
Duke Caboom spends Toy Story 4 attempting motorcycle jumps, panicking mid-jump, and striking poses at every opportunity regardless of how urgent the situation is. The helmet and cape together are what make this costume readable. Duke was voiced by Keanu Reeves in the 2019 Pixar film, and Reeves himself invented Duke’s compulsive posing habit by acting out poses on a table in the production meetings. Recognition is solid among Pixar fans, thinner with general audiences.
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The cape and helmet need to match in tone. Duke’s palette is white with red Canadian accents throughout, and if the cape is a different shade of white from the jacket, the costume looks assembled by someone who gave up halfway. The mustache is what turns this from “biker” into “specific character.” Without it, the helmet and cape read as elaborate but unidentifiable. If the visor does not sit flat against the helmet opening, it will shift over the course of the night and start covering your face, which makes it hard to drink anything and harder to deliver lines.
Duke Caboom does poses. That is his whole thing. Before saying anything, after landing anything, sometimes just standing there. Arms wide, chin up, one knee bent slightly forward. He holds it for a beat longer than is comfortable for everyone watching. Keanu Reeves invented the pose habit himself in production meetings, and it is the most in-character thing you can do all night.
Apply the mustache before you leave
Party humidity and face oils will loosen fake mustache adhesive over time. Apply it at home with clean, dry skin, press it firmly for 30 seconds, and let it set for at least 20 minutes before eating or drinking anything. Reapplying a fake mustache in a bathroom mirror at 10pm is not the Duke Caboom experience.
Wrap the tape at home, not at the party
Red bar tape looks clean and precise when applied carefully and terrible when rushed. Do the cuff wrapping the day before. Tape that is unevenly applied or starting to peel mid-party reads as a costume malfunction rather than a design detail. Once it is on and set, it holds well all night.
Couples
Strong pairing with a clear dynamic from the film. Bo Peep is the one who convinces Duke to actually attempt the jumps, which gives you something to act out all night. Both costumes are well-documented and visually distinct enough that the group reads without explanation to anyone who has seen Toy Story 4.
Duo
Conditional on both people committing to character. Two toys from the same universe with very different energy: one poses constantly, one speaks in Space Ranger protocol. The visual contrast works and Buzz is one of the most recognized costumes anywhere, which means Duke gets pulled into frame with him.
Group: Toy Story Crew
Strong as a full group because Toy Story is one of the most recognized film franchises in existence and every character in this list has a distinct look. Five people, five clearly different costumes, zero explanation required at any party.
Group: Iconic Movie Stunt and Action Heroes
Weak as a unified group. These characters share nothing except the vague category of “action” and come from completely unrelated franchises. At a party, the group reads as four people who coincidentally wore adventure costumes rather than a planned concept. Works only if the group leans into the absurdity of a plastic toy daredevil standing next to actual human action heroes.
The bundled costume set is convenient but the individual pieces give you more control over fit and quality. The helmet especially is worth buying dedicated rather than hoping the set version looks right.
Duke’s character is specific enough that a few behaviors will do more for recognition than any accessory. The posing is the whole performance.
Start with the white open-face helmet and Canadian flag cape. Those two are essential. Add white leather biker pants and jacket, wrap red bar tape around the cuffs and collar, apply a cop mustache, put on white Converse, and add Canadian flag stickers wherever you have room. Without the helmet and cape, the costume does not land as Duke Caboom.
The third one is his most honest moment. Deliver it while clearly attempting something anyway.
Toy Story 4 came out in 2019, which puts Duke Caboom in that awkward zone where Pixar fans remember him clearly but casual audiences may pause. With Toy Story 5 confirmed and Keanu Reeves returning, recognition should improve heading into 2026. Solid pick at any party that skews animated film fans.
You can build it yourself for about the same cost with better results on fit. The set is easier if you want one order and one delivery. The individual pieces give you more control, especially on the helmet and jacket, which are the two items where quality matters most.
Yes. Keanu Reeves was born in Beirut but grew up in Canada and holds Canadian citizenship. Duke Caboom’s Canadian identity is widely considered a nod to his voice actor, according to the Duke Caboom Wikipedia entry.
Duke makes a cameo in Incredibles 2, in Jack-Jack’s playpen, before Toy Story 4 was released. He is also confirmed for Toy Story 5, with Keanu Reeves reprising the role.
Arms wide, chin up, one knee raised forward. Duke holds poses longer than is comfortable for everyone watching, which is the point. Do them before answering questions, after arriving anywhere, and at random intervals when nothing is happening. Keanu Reeves invented the pose habit himself during Toy Story 4 production meetings, so the more committed it looks, the more accurate it is.