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The creator of the Girls Gone Wild franchise made millions of dollars in the late 1990s and early 2000s selling VHS videos of women flashing their breasts - and more - on camera through wall-to ...
This is a list of animated short films.The list is organized by decade and year, and then alphabetically. The list includes theatrical, television, and direct-to-video films with less than 40 minutes runtime.
Girls Gone Wild: The Untold Story offers a behind-the-scenes look at the multi-million dollar franchise created by notorious film producer Joe Francis, in which young women were filmed exposing ...
The series had a catchy theme song from which many children learned to spell "encyclopedia", most likely inspired by Paul Whiteman's novelty hit, "C-O-N-S-T-A-N-T-I-N-O-P-L-E" (both songs even had the same tempo and meter). At least five or six shorts aired under the Encyclopedia's banner featured Jiminy Cricket.
Girls Gone Wild is a 1929 pre-Code American melodrama film produced and released by Fox Film Corporation. The film was controversial as an early example of the rising tide of violence and disrespect for the law that would become key themes in the 1930s.
Walt Disney Animation Studios logo. This is a list of animated short films produced by Walt Disney and Walt Disney Animation Studios from 1921 to the present.. This includes films produced at the Laugh-O-Gram Studio which Disney founded in 1921 as well as the animation studio now owned by The Walt Disney Company, previously called the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio (1923–1926), The Walt ...
Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School; Scooby-Doo! Legend of the Phantosaur; Search for Grace; The Seventh Veil; The Shadow (1994 film) Shallow Hal; Shin Ultraman; Sin Pepitas en la Lengua; Spellbound (1945 film) Stir of Echoes; The Strongest Man in the World; Svengali (1927 film) Svengali (1931 film) Svengali (1954 film)
The Eyes Have It is a Donald Duck animated short film produced in Technicolor by Walt Disney Productions, originally released on March 30, 1945 by RKO Radio Pictures. [1] It was the final Disney short animated by Don Patterson and it was the only short to have his on-screen credit.