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Home Movies is an American [1] [2] animated sitcom created by Brendon Small and Loren Bouchard. [3] The show centers on an eight-year-old aspiring filmmaker, also named Brendon Small, who makes homemade film productions in his spare time with his friends Melissa Robbins and Jason Penopolis. He lives with his divorced mother Paula and his ...
"Choo Choo Train (Ch-Ch-Foo)" is a song written by Jack Lawrence and Marc Fontenoy and performed by Doris Day featuring Paul Weston and His Orchestra. [1] In 1953, the track reached No. 20 on the U.S. chart .
align. This is a list of episodes for the American animated television series Home Movies.The series began with "Get Away From My Mom", which was broadcast on April 26, 1999, by UPN, which showed the first five episodes premiered before it was cancelled.
Cuckoo on a Choo Choo was filmed on April 21–23, 1952. The plot is borrowed from two popular films of the period. The idea of a stolen railroad car is a parody of A Streetcar Named Desire, while the imaginary animal friend parodies the film Harvey (Victoria Horne had starred in the latter). [1]
The DVD boxset for season one was released by Shout!Factory on November 16, 2004. Other than all thirteen episodes of the season, the DVD included several bonus features, including interviews with the cast and crew, animatics, an animation gallery, commentary tracks on ten episodes, and two short films created by Small and Benjamin.
Trains speed through exhibits during the 2023 Christmas Train Garden, Friday, Nov. 24, 2023, at the Greater Hanover Area Fire Museum in Hanover Borough.
An elderly Choo Choo Train arrives to teach the three about transport in an animated sequence, transforming into various vehicles, but dies while in the form of a car. Red Guy, desperate to leave, manages to get the car started, resuscitating the Choo Choo Train and crashing through the wall of their house.
Amateur film equipment became standardized in the 1920s and 30s with the 9.5 mm, 16 mm, and 8 mm formats. By the late 1950s, home movies became cheaper to make, becoming available to the middle class. In the mid-1960s, Super 8's ease of use led to home movies being even more popular. [7]