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Shorts (also known as Shorts: The Adventures of the Wishing Rock and released internationally as The Wishing Rock) is a 2009 fantasy comedy film written and directed by Robert Rodriguez [2] and starring Jon Cryer, William H. Macy, Leslie Mann, James Spader, Jimmy Bennett, Kat Dennings, and introducing Jolie Vanier in her film debut, with Jake Short, Devon Gearhart, Leo Howard, Trevor Gagnon ...
A film adaptation of the Tony Johnson and Mark Teague children's book The Iguana Brothers: A Tale of Two Lizards. [23] Left Tern: An animated film pitched by studio veteran H.B. "Buck" Lewis; was described as "Home Alone with Birds". [24] Mutts: A film adaptation to the popular comic strip of the same name. Santa Calls
2017 Short Film Awards. Narrative Shorts Jury Award—Forever Now, directed by Kristian Håskjold; Narrative Shorts Special Jury Recognition for Acting—DeKalb Elementary, directed by Reed Van Dyk, Actor: Tarra Riggs; Narrative Shorts Special Jury Recognition—Laps, directed by Charlotte Wells
The following is a list of productions produced by DreamWorks Animation, a division of NBCUniversal, which includes animated feature films, shorts, specials, and television series. As of 2025, DreamWorks Animation has released 50 feature films, with their first being Antz on October 2, 1998, and their latest being Dog Man on January 31, 2025.
Except for three humans (producer Ken Murray, bird trainer George Burton, and Elizabeth Walters) in a short set-up segment before the opening credits, the film features an all-animal cast. The film was shot on the world's second smallest film set, a miniature village built onto a 15 by 30 ft (4.6 by 9.1 m) tabletop.
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The only Looney Tunes compilation film with no new animation; bridging sequences are all live-action documentary. Only Looney Tunes film originally distributed by United Artists. Included on Looney Tunes Golden Collection, volume 4 as a special feature. Then as standalone feature through Warner Archive on DVD. The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Movie
Thought to be promotional marketing for the Tom & Jerry film, the shorts received positive reception from fans and critics. [4] [1] FR Dougal of CartoonMilk, an animation critic and a self-described lifelong Tom and Jerry fan, gave the shorts a negative review. Despite praising their art style's reminiscence of the mid-1940s character designs ...