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Chopper has appeared in other media besides the manga and its television anime adaptation. He is featured in most of the One Piece films starting with Movie 3: Chopper's Kingdom of Strange Animal Island, where he is the main character. He is also the main character in the ninth movie, which is a retelling of the storyline during which he was ...
Kazue Ikura voiced Tony Tony Chopper for episodes 254–263. [12] Brina Palencia voices Chopper in the English Funimation dub. When creating Chopper, Oda wanted a mascot who is both cute and feeble. [13] An IGN review of the manga praised Chopper's character as one of the best in the series and said that he was able to be both touching and ...
Chopper (voiced by Angelique Perrin) - A bulldog. Originally from the "Yakky Doodle" segment of The Yogi Bear Show. Chopper is depicted as a female and is Yakky Doodle's adoptive canine mother. She is tougher than her daughter and not afraid to be lovingly rough. Chopper is revealed to run the Cattanooga Cheese Explosion pizzeria.
Ikue Ōtani (大谷 育江, Ōtani Ikue, born August 18, 1965) is a Japanese actress who specializes in voice acting. [1] She is best known for her anime roles in the Pokémon series (as Pikachu), One Piece (as Tony Tony Chopper), Detective Conan (as Mitsuhiko Tsuburaya), Corpse Party (as Sachiko Shinozaki), Naruto (as Konohamaru Sarutobi), Cookie Run: Kingdom (as Pancake Cookie), Smile PreCure!
Chopper is a 2000 Australian crime drama film written and directed by Andrew Dominik, in his feature directorial debut, based on the autobiographical books by the criminal turned author Mark "Chopper" Read. The film stars Eric Bana as the title character and co-stars Vince Colosimo, Simon Lyndon, Kate Beahan and David Field. The film follows ...
Chopper (archaeology), a stone tool; Chopper (electronics), a switching device; Chopper (ghost), an alleged ghost in Germany; Chopper (propeller), a propeller design; Chopper (rap), a vocal delivery style; Chopper (Star Wars character), a droid from the Star Wars Rebels animated series; Nick Chopper, the Tin Woodman in L. Frank Baum's Oz series
[21] Various folk theories on the origin include the tradition of naming of ships after goddesses, well-known women, female family members or objects of affection (though ships have male and non-personal names), the tradition of having a female figurehead on the front of the ship (though men and animals are also used as figureheads), ship ...
The Raleigh Chopper was the bike that rescued Raleigh from administration with huge global sales from a total production run including Mk1 Mk2 Mk3 models which ran from 1968 to 1983 (mk1 & mk2) and then 2004 to 2012 (mk3). The Chopper featured in numerous TV series and movies throughout the 1970s and 1980s, including "Back to the future".