Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fantastic Planet (French: La Planète sauvage; Czech: Divoká planeta, lit. ' The Wild Planet ' ) is a 1973 French-language experimental independent [ 2 ] adult animated science fiction art film , [ 3 ] directed by René Laloux and written by Laloux and Roland Topor , the latter of whom also completed the film's production design .
Fantastic Planet is the third album by the American alternative rock band Failure, released on August 13, 1996, by Slash Records and Warner Bros. Records. It was the last album released on Slash Records prior to its acquisition by London Recordings in 1996.
The Fantastic Journey is an American science fiction television series that was originally aired on NBC from February 3 through June 16, 1977. It was originally intended to run 13 episodes, as a mid-season replacement , but NBC cancelled the series in April, after the ninth episode aired.
The 2010 limited LP release of Fantastic Planet were in such high demand, that they were fetching hundreds of dollars online. In 2016 as part of their pledge project for The Heart Is A Monster, the band re-released Fantastic Planet on vinyl once more.
First edition. Oms en série (lit.Oms Linked Together, translation published as Fantastic Planet) is a French science fiction novel written by Stefan Wul, first published in 1957 as one of the Fleuve Noir "Anticipation" novels, It was later adapted into the animated feature film La Planète sauvage (Fantastic Planet, 1973).
The Fantastic Planet: A World of Magic and Mystery (1980, UK ISBN 0850474523/US ISBN 0517292254) Dangerous Frontiers: the fight for survival on distant worlds (1980, UK ISBN 0850474531) (Printed as Settlers in Space: The fight for survival on distant worlds in the US ISBN 0517292262)
"Stuck on You" is a song from the American alternative rock band Failure. It was released as the lead single from their third album Fantastic Planet.It was their only song to chart at Billboard, reaching number 23 in the U.S. Alternative Charts [1] and number 31 at U.S. Mainstream Rock Charts.
Another important collaborator of his was Roland Topor with whom Laloux made Dead Time (Les Temps Morts, 1964), The Snails (Les Escargots, 1965) and his most famous work, the feature length Fantastic Planet (La Planète Sauvage, 1973).