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Girl vs. Monster is a 2012 American comedy horror Disney Channel Original Movie that premiered on October 12, 2012. The film stars Olivia Holt as Skylar, a teenage girl who discovers on the eve of Halloween that she is a fifth-generation monster hunter and that her parents are active monster hunters. [ 1 ]
Olivia Hastings Holt [1] (born August 5, 1997 [2] [3]) is an American actress and singer.She starred in the Disney XD series Kickin' It, Disney Channel Original Movie Girl vs. Monster, and the Disney Channel Original Series I Didn't Do It.
Game Boy Color Disney's Mickey Saves the Day: 3D Adventure [4] Disney Interactive [citation needed] Disney Interactive: 2001: Microsoft Windows Minnie & Friends: Yume no Kuni o Sagashite [5] Hudson Soft: Disney Interactive: 2001: Game Boy Color Disney's Magical Mirror Starring Mickey Mouse: Capcom: Nintendo: 2002: GameCube: Disney's Party ...
She also portrayed Deimata, Skylar's personal monster from the 2012 Disney Channel Original Movie, Girl vs. Monster. Dawson wrote the stage play Them & Us, which premiered at Theatre Passe Muraille in 2009. [5] She has also written for Call Me Fitz, SketchCom, Single White Spenny, and Your Family or Mine.
This is a list of programs and specials formerly and currently broadcast by the children's cable television channel Disney XD in the United States, and previously throughout the world on its international sister networks. Dates listed below are for American premiere or finales.
The monster searches for the princess, the time required being the payoff. They are both in a totally dark room (of any shape), but they are each cognizant of its boundary. Capture means that the distance between the princess and the monster is within the capture radius, which is assumed to be small in comparison with the dimension of the room.
Disney Dreamlight Valley is a 2023 life simulation adventure game developed by Gameloft Montreal and published by Gameloft. [5] The game has players tend to a magical valley populated by various Disney and Pixar characters who previously underwent a curse that caused them to lose their memories of their lives in the valley.
The Washington Post considered the games as tie-ins that Disney was cranking out at the time, strictly for fans of the film properties. [18] The Los Angeles Times noted the games featured an online component, but the Internet content wasn't assured as safe by Disney.