Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
During the chase a fence gets knock down, releasing the crazy local dog Smokey, who runs into the nearby cat show, scaring away all the competing cats. D.C. rallies the show cats to run with him along the roofs of the neighborhood and jump down onto Ma and Pa's car, causing it to crash, foiling their crimes.
2001: Princess of Thieves, a Disney-produced American made-for-TV movie, starred Keira Knightley as Robin Hood's (Stuart Wilson) heroic adolescent daughter, Gwyn, who takes over her father's role and comes to his rescue. [17] 2009: Beyond Sherwood Forest, a TV movie starring Robin Dunne as Robin Hood and Erica Durance as Maid Marian [18]
A live-action feature film adaptation of The Sword in the Stone entered development in July 2015, with Bryan Cogman writing the script and Brigham Taylor serving as producer. In January 2018, Juan Carlos Fresnadillo was announced as director. [88] The next month, it was revealed that the film would premiere exclusively on Disney+.
Animal House: Live-action Two other sit-coms were also based loosely on Animal House, one called Brothers and Sisters in 1979 and another called Co-Ed Fever, also 1979. Dominion: Legion: Live-action Set 25 years after the film DreamWorks Dragons: How to Train Your Dragon: CGI animated Set between the first film and the sequels. Dumb & Dumber ...
This is a list of live action theatrical, television, or direct-to-video/DVD films that were based on cartoons and comics: 0-9 ... (TV, 1978) Doctor Strange (2016) [11]
2008 – Fly Me to the Moon (live-action ending sequence) 2008 – Semum (animated demonic creatures) 2008 – Hellboy II: The Golden Army (stop motion puppet prologue sequence) [36] [37] 2008 – Igor (live-action scenes and James Lipton cameo on TV) 2009 – 500 Days of Summer; 2009 – Arthur and the Revenge of Maltazard
At a performance of Family Guy Live in Chicago, during the Q&A session that ends each performance, Seth Green was asked how they came up with the name Robot Chicken. He explained that the title of each episode was a name Adult Swim rejected for the name of the show. A Region 2 version of the set was released in the UK on September 29, 2008. [2]
ThunderCats is a science fantasy animated television series, developed by Ethan Spaulding and Michael Jelenic for Cartoon Network. [2] A reboot of the original 1980s TV series of the same name (which ran from 1985 to 1989), ThunderCats was produced by American studio Warner Bros. Animation and animated by Japanese studio Studio 4°C, and combined elements of western animation with Japanese ...