Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Quest for Camelot was released by Warner Bros. under their Family Entertainment label on May 15, 1998 in the United States and Canada. It received mixed reviews [ 6 ] and was a commercial failure , grossing $38.1 million against a $40 million budget. [ 7 ]
Quest for Camelot is a third-person, 2D action role-playing game. [3] It features nine worlds with 60 levels. [4] The gameplay includes defeating enemies in each area, fetch quests, and carry quests. [3] Parts of the story are told through slideshows as cut scenes. [4] The game supports saves on battery and works with the Game Boy Printer. [4]
Quest for Camelot: May 15, 1998: Warner Bros. Feature Animation [st 2] The King and I: March 19, 1999: Rich Animation Studios and Rankin/Bass Productions [st 2] South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut: June 30, 1999 [st 4] Comedy Central Films, Scott Rudin Productions and Paramount Pictures: The Iron Giant: August 6, 1999: Warner Bros. Feature Animation
Prior to the release of Quest for Camelot (1998), screenwriters David Seidler and Jacqueline Feather were contracted to adapt the film for Morgan Creek, to be released under the Warner Bros. Family Entertainment label. In 1998, it was revealed the plot had been "slightly altered" from the original musical "in the interest of family viewing."
Quest for Camelot Nights was a stage show performed on Switlik Lake at Six Flags Great Adventure from May 9, 1998 through 2001. The show told the story of the 1998 Warner Bros. animated film Quest for Camelot, featuring music and lyrics by Patrick Doyle as well as fireworks, lasers, and water projections.
The King's Damosel (also known as The King's Damsel) is a fantasy novel based on Arthurian legend by Vera Chapman first published in 1976. It served as the inspiration for the 1998 Warner Bros. film Quest for Camelot.
The song was released as a single from the Quest for Camelot soundtrack and Rimes's album Sittin' on Top of the World on March 24, 1998. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] In most parts of the world, "Looking Through Your Eyes" was released as a double A-side with " Commitment ".
In the musical Camelot, Lionel is the knight brought back to life by Lancelot after he accidentally kills him in a joust (though the film switches him with Dinadan). The two do not seem to be related. Lionel appears in the 1998 animated film Quest for Camelot as the father of the protagonist, Kayley, who wished to follow her father's footsteps ...