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Blossom is a fictional character that serves as one of the three main protagonists of The Powerpuff Girls franchise.She was created by Craig McCracken and made her first appearance in the Whoopass Stew! short "A Sticky Situation" in 1992, and was fully introduced in the television series The Powerpuff Girls in 1998.
The Powerpuff Girls Movie is a 2002 American animated superhero film based on the Cartoon Network animated television series The Powerpuff Girls.It was co-written and directed by series' creator Craig McCracken (in his feature-length directorial debut), co-written by Charlie Bean, Lauren Faust, Paul Rudish, and Don Shank, and stars the regular television cast of Catherine Cavadini, Tara Strong ...
However, when the gang exploits her infatuation and lures Blossom and Bubbles into danger, Buttercup quickly comes to her sisters' rescue and shows the boys the real meaning of the word "crush." The beastly bumpkin Fuzzy Lumpkins goes wild in Townsville and only the Powerpuff Girls, with some help from a flying squirrel, can teach him to ...
Blossom gets a toothache one night, making her scared of the dentist. When Bubbles draws a smiley face on her toothache, Blossom gets tired. But as soon as the girls fall asleep, Blossom’s toothache turns green and gets bigger, turning her into a cactus-like monster. Blossom runs over Townsville, keeping everybody up all night.
The movie, a prequel to the series, tells the story of how the Powerpuff Girls were created, and how Mojo Jojo became a supervillain. [81] The movie received a rating of 63% at review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, as well as some criticism for the violence involved. [82] [83] In all, the movie grossed $16 million worldwide with an $11 million ...
The Powerpuff Girls is an American animated media franchise created by animator Craig McCracken and produced by Hanna-Barbera (later Cartoon Network Studios).The franchise originated on the cartoon short Whoopass Stew! in 1992 and centers on Blossom, Bubbles, and Buttercup, three genetically engineered little girls with superpowers.
The pure honesty and naivety of a child are often endearing.However, truthfulness and candor have a dark side, and coming from an innocent mind can make them all the more eerie.
Although David Byrne recorded a song titled "Buttercup, Blossom, and Bubbles Say" along with his daughter Malu, who wrote the lyrics, the track was left out of the album. [9] The New York Times journalist Ann Powers praised the pop album's original songs, saying, "The precocious sound these bands cultivate has never had a more appropriate niche."