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The Magic Roundabout (also known as Sprung! The Magic Roundabout; French: Pollux – Le manège enchanté) is a 2005 animated adventure fantasy comedy film based on the television series of the same name. [3] Unlike the show, which was presented with stop-motion animation, the film utilizes computer-generated animation.
Tall Tales from the Magical Garden of Antoon Krings (French: Drôles de petites bêtes, lit. 'Funny little animals'), also released as simply Tall Tales, is a 2017 French-language 3D animated adventure film written and directed by Antoon Krings [] and Arnaud Delalande [] and written by Christel Gonnard, based on the Funny Little Animals series of children's books by Kring.
Billy, along with Mandy and their cowardly but loyal best friend Devon (Christopher Fazio) discover that Billy's family has magical origins, and upon a chance encounter with a mysterious shopkeeper (Roddy Piper) who Billy buys a wand from for $11, they find out that he can use the wand to cast magic spells, and together they embark on a journey ...
Charlie the Unicorn is a 2005 animated comedy short film created by Jason Steele of independent film company FilmCow in Orlando, Florida.The short follows Charlie, a lethargic and pessimistic unicorn, who is taken by a blue unicorn and a pink unicorn on an adventure to the magical Candy Mountain.
Jackie Chan Adventures is an animated television series developed by John Rogers, Duane Capizzi and Jeff Kline, and produced by Columbia TriStar Television (now Sony Pictures Television), Adelaide Productions, The JC Group and Blue Train Entertainment.
Bayala: A Magical Adventure (German: Bayala - Das magische Elfenabenteuer; released in some European countries as The Fairy Princess and the Unicorn) [4] is a 2019 German-Luxembourgish 3D computer-animated high fantasy adventure film directed by Aina Jarvine and co-directed by Federico Milella from a script by Venessa Walder. [5]
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The series' characters were created by Carrozza in 1996, [10] [better source needed] with the series being pitched to Cartoon Network in 2005–2006 as "Legendary Warriors for Hire" and to Mondo Media [11] in 2007–2008 as "Dungeons and Dayjobs", [12] before being picked up by Cartoon Network in 2013. Most of the series was animated in-house ...