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A rat who makes fast friends with Willard Stiles in both 1971's Willard and the 2003 remake of the same name. Ben Rat Ben: A rat befriended by a lonely young boy. Ben leads a colony trained by the character Willard Stiles in the prior film Willard. Hammy Squirrel Over the Hedge: An overactive squirrel obsessed with cookies. Stuart Little Mouse ...
A rat subject to cruel scientific experiments, but escaped and took refuge in Dilbert's house. Rat-Man: Rat Rat-man: Leo Ortolani: Anthropomorphic male rat, an inept superhero originally conceived as a parody of Batman. Setsuko Mouse Cinderalla: Junko Mizuno: Sibylline Mouse Sibylline: Raymond Macherot: Anthropomorphic female mouse who lives in ...
Rufus is a fictional character in the American animated television series Kim Possible (2002–2007) and its 2019 live-action film adaptation.Voiced by actress Nancy Cartwright, Rufus is a pet naked mole-rat owned by Ron Stoppable – Kim Possible's best friend and sidekick – and first appears in the show's pilot episode "Crush", which premiered on June 7, 2002.
T. Tales of the Tooth Fairies; Team Umizoomi; Temple the Balloonist; Timothy Goes to School; The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show; Tom and Jerry in New York; Tom & Jerry Kids
Female characters in animated television series (1 C, 214 P) Pages in category "Female characters in animation" The following 150 pages are in this category, out of 150 total.
This is a list of horror anime television series, films, and OVAs.While not all inclusive, this list contains numerous works that are representative of the genre. For accuracy of the list, the most common English usage is followed by Japanese name and romaji version.
A menacing rat featured in this 1968 horror novel; also appears in the film adaptation Willard, the 2003 remake Willard, and the sequel Ben. Dangerous Beans Terry Pratchett: The Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents: A near-blind albino rat with a guru-like guidance to the rats and the only one who can withstand Spider's mind control. Death ...
Kitarō of the Graveyard was published as a rental manga in 1960, but it was considered too scary for children. In 1965, renamed to Hakaba no Kitarō , it appeared in Shōnen Magazine (after one of the editors came across the kashibon and offered Mizuki a contract) [ 27 ] and ran through 1970.