Photo: The Walt Disney Company via GettyAmy Poehleris ready to show fans a peek inside the teenage mind.Disney and Pixar announced at the D23 Expo Friday that asequel to 2015’s Oscar-winningInside Outis coming soon, with Poehler returning as Joy and Kelsey Mann directing. Poehler tells PEOPLE the new movie tackles the awkward, at times frustrating, teen era of the main character Riley as she goes through puberty.“At the very end if the original, Joy has that great moment where she’s like, ‘Finally, everything the way it’s supposed to be.’ Then we see that big puberty button, ‘Should we press this?’ We do press it in the second movie,” says Poehler, 50. “In some ways,Inside Outset itself up for a sequel and we’re going there.““We’re going to have what it feels like to be a teenager, the new emotions that live inside a young person’s brain,” she continues. “In many ways, it was really exciting. We knew exactly where we were. We go to the teen brain and we see the madness that lives inside there.“The Walt Disney Company via GettyNever miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free weekly newsletterto get the biggest news of the week delivered to your inbox every Friday.Poehler reflected on her own teen years, saying there was lots of “feeling frustrated” or “like you’re very in between.““There’s a lot of things you want to have move quicker than they are,” she says. “I remember that feeling of wanting to grow up fast, which is such a funny feeling now. You wanted time to go fast. You wanted life to move. You wanted to move. Sometimes, you get stuck in a system or a group that won’t let you do that. I think a lot frustration. I can remember that feeling. Feeling frustration and I know that young people still feel that.“The actress adds, “There’s a lot of very complicated feelings about who am I, where do I fit it? Sometimes your brain is not your friend. But then also, it’s a time of real exploration, letting things go that don’t work for you anymore, taking big swings and big chances. You’re supposed to make a lot of mistakes. It’s an adventurous time and it can be really treacherous.““Those feelings don’t go away,” says Poehler. “They make room of their own in your brain and then they come back over and over again at different times in your life.“Inside Out(2015).Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures/Courtesy Everett CollectionPoehler — who is mom to sons Archie, 13, and Abel, 12, with exWill Arnett— says the new film will go “deeper” with the themes since “a lot has happened since the first film in terms of the emotional intelligence andhow we think about mental healthand how our emotions can affect us physically, and what’s really going on inside our head.“And she is proud of the fact thatInside Outempowers young audiences and helps them vocalize their feelings.“Young people have a really hard time telling the world how they feel. Either they’re dismissed or they don’t have the language yet or they’re afraid their feelings won’t be what their parents want them to feel,” says Poehler. “So to give young people a sense of agency is really nuts.“Inside Out 2will debut in summer 2024.

Photo: The Walt Disney Company via Getty

D23 EXPO 2022 - The Ultimate Disney Fan Event presented by VISA - brings together all the worlds of Disney under one roof for three packed days of presentations, pavilions, experiences, concerts, sneak peeks, shopping, and more. The event, which takes place September 9, 10, and 11 at the Anaheim Convention Center, provides fans with unprecedented access to Disney films, series, games, theme parks, collectibles, and celebrities. (The Walt Disney Company via Getty Images) Amy Poehler

Amy Poehleris ready to show fans a peek inside the teenage mind.Disney and Pixar announced at the D23 Expo Friday that asequel to 2015’s Oscar-winningInside Outis coming soon, with Poehler returning as Joy and Kelsey Mann directing. Poehler tells PEOPLE the new movie tackles the awkward, at times frustrating, teen era of the main character Riley as she goes through puberty.“At the very end if the original, Joy has that great moment where she’s like, ‘Finally, everything the way it’s supposed to be.’ Then we see that big puberty button, ‘Should we press this?’ We do press it in the second movie,” says Poehler, 50. “In some ways,Inside Outset itself up for a sequel and we’re going there.““We’re going to have what it feels like to be a teenager, the new emotions that live inside a young person’s brain,” she continues. “In many ways, it was really exciting. We knew exactly where we were. We go to the teen brain and we see the madness that lives inside there.“The Walt Disney Company via GettyNever miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free weekly newsletterto get the biggest news of the week delivered to your inbox every Friday.Poehler reflected on her own teen years, saying there was lots of “feeling frustrated” or “like you’re very in between.““There’s a lot of things you want to have move quicker than they are,” she says. “I remember that feeling of wanting to grow up fast, which is such a funny feeling now. You wanted time to go fast. You wanted life to move. You wanted to move. Sometimes, you get stuck in a system or a group that won’t let you do that. I think a lot frustration. I can remember that feeling. Feeling frustration and I know that young people still feel that.“The actress adds, “There’s a lot of very complicated feelings about who am I, where do I fit it? Sometimes your brain is not your friend. But then also, it’s a time of real exploration, letting things go that don’t work for you anymore, taking big swings and big chances. You’re supposed to make a lot of mistakes. It’s an adventurous time and it can be really treacherous.““Those feelings don’t go away,” says Poehler. “They make room of their own in your brain and then they come back over and over again at different times in your life.“Inside Out(2015).Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures/Courtesy Everett CollectionPoehler — who is mom to sons Archie, 13, and Abel, 12, with exWill Arnett— says the new film will go “deeper” with the themes since “a lot has happened since the first film in terms of the emotional intelligence andhow we think about mental healthand how our emotions can affect us physically, and what’s really going on inside our head.“And she is proud of the fact thatInside Outempowers young audiences and helps them vocalize their feelings.“Young people have a really hard time telling the world how they feel. Either they’re dismissed or they don’t have the language yet or they’re afraid their feelings won’t be what their parents want them to feel,” says Poehler. “So to give young people a sense of agency is really nuts.“Inside Out 2will debut in summer 2024.

Amy Poehleris ready to show fans a peek inside the teenage mind.

Disney and Pixar announced at the D23 Expo Friday that asequel to 2015’s Oscar-winningInside Outis coming soon, with Poehler returning as Joy and Kelsey Mann directing. Poehler tells PEOPLE the new movie tackles the awkward, at times frustrating, teen era of the main character Riley as she goes through puberty.

“At the very end if the original, Joy has that great moment where she’s like, ‘Finally, everything the way it’s supposed to be.’ Then we see that big puberty button, ‘Should we press this?’ We do press it in the second movie,” says Poehler, 50. “In some ways,Inside Outset itself up for a sequel and we’re going there.”

“We’re going to have what it feels like to be a teenager, the new emotions that live inside a young person’s brain,” she continues. “In many ways, it was really exciting. We knew exactly where we were. We go to the teen brain and we see the madness that lives inside there.”

The Walt Disney Company via Getty

D23 EXPO 2022 - The Ultimate Disney Fan Event presented by VISA - brings together all the worlds of Disney under one roof for three packed days of presentations, pavilions, experiences, concerts, sneak peeks, shopping, and more. The event, which takes place September 9, 10, and 11 at the Anaheim Convention Center, provides fans with unprecedented access to Disney films, series, games, theme parks, collectibles, and celebrities. (The Walt Disney Company via Getty Images) Pete Docter (Chief Creative Officer, Pixar), Amy Poehler

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free weekly newsletterto get the biggest news of the week delivered to your inbox every Friday.

Poehler reflected on her own teen years, saying there was lots of “feeling frustrated” or “like you’re very in between.”

“There’s a lot of things you want to have move quicker than they are,” she says. “I remember that feeling of wanting to grow up fast, which is such a funny feeling now. You wanted time to go fast. You wanted life to move. You wanted to move. Sometimes, you get stuck in a system or a group that won’t let you do that. I think a lot frustration. I can remember that feeling. Feeling frustration and I know that young people still feel that.”

The actress adds, “There’s a lot of very complicated feelings about who am I, where do I fit it? Sometimes your brain is not your friend. But then also, it’s a time of real exploration, letting things go that don’t work for you anymore, taking big swings and big chances. You’re supposed to make a lot of mistakes. It’s an adventurous time and it can be really treacherous.”

“Those feelings don’t go away,” says Poehler. “They make room of their own in your brain and then they come back over and over again at different times in your life.”

Inside Out(2015).Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

NSIDE OUT, from left: Anger (voice: Lewis Black), Disgust (voice: Mindy Kaling), Joy (voice: Amy Poehler), Fear (voice: Bill Hader), Sadness (voice: Phyllis Smith), 2015.

Poehler — who is mom to sons Archie, 13, and Abel, 12, with exWill Arnett— says the new film will go “deeper” with the themes since “a lot has happened since the first film in terms of the emotional intelligence andhow we think about mental healthand how our emotions can affect us physically, and what’s really going on inside our head.”

And she is proud of the fact thatInside Outempowers young audiences and helps them vocalize their feelings.

“Young people have a really hard time telling the world how they feel. Either they’re dismissed or they don’t have the language yet or they’re afraid their feelings won’t be what their parents want them to feel,” says Poehler. “So to give young people a sense of agency is really nuts.”

Inside Out 2will debut in summer 2024.

source: people.com