Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
From a template-generated category: This is a redirect from a category name that is generated by default by a template of any kind, but where that category is now invalid in favour of the target category, and the template is able to resolve the category name using this redirect.
Cars was also selected as the Favorite Family Movie at the 33rd People's Choice Awards. The most prestigious award that Cars received was the inaugural Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film. Cars also won the highest award for animation in 2006, the Best Animated Feature Annie Award.
Cars is a 2006 American animated sports comedy film produced by Pixar Animation Studios for Walt Disney Pictures.The film was directed by John Lasseter, co-directed by Joe Ranft, produced by Darla K. Anderson, and written by Lasseter, Ranft, Dan Fogelman, Kiel Murray, Phil Lorin, and Jorgen Klubien based on a story by Lasseter, Ranft, and Klubien.
Doing so will alternatively put the image into Non-free posters category. However, you have the option of putting the image into one of the appropriate sub-categories such as Non-free images of event posters, Non-free images of film posters, Animated film posters, Non-free images of television program posters, Non-free images of theatre posters, etc.
Based on his popular Cars sketches, Bobby Hacker filmed Cars 3 during the span of one month in 2008. [2] Hacker shot Cars 3 quickly, so he could enter it in the Sundance Film Festival. [3] The film's dialogue and plot were improvised by the actors. [3] Unlike the Cars shorts, which run for roughly two minutes, [3] Cars 3 has a running time of ...
The following is a list of films produced and/or released by Columbia Pictures in 2000–2009. Most films listed here were distributed theatrically in the United States by the company's distribution division, Sony Pictures Releasing (formerly known as Triumph Releasing Corporation (1982–1994) and Columbia TriStar Film Distributors International (1991–2005).
The world's first film poster (to date), for 1895's L'Arroseur arrosé, by the Lumière brothers Rudolph Valentino in Blood and Sand, 1922. The first poster for a specific film, rather than a "magic lantern show", was based on an illustration by Marcellin Auzolle to promote the showing of the Lumiere Brothers film L'Arroseur arrosé at the Grand Café in Paris on December 26, 1895.
File:A Horrible Way to Die (movie poster).jpg; File:A Kid Like Jake.png; File:A Kind of Loving (1962) film poster.jpg; File:A Kind of Murder (film) poster.jpg; File:A Lady Without Passport movie poster.jpg; File:A Ladys Morals.jpg; File:A Landscape of Lies.jpg; File:A Late Quartet Poster.jpg; File:A letter to three wives movie poster.jpg