Looney Tunes is a classic American animated media franchise featuring a wacky cast of characters, including Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Elmer Fudd, and much more. Known for their slapstick humor, witty dialogue, and iconic catchphrases, these characters have entertained audiences of all ages for decades.
Shinichi Kudo is a young detective who one day discovers the evil plans of a dangerous criminal organization and is poisoned. However, the poison does not kill him, but by accident, shrinks him and turns him into a boy. Trapped in this body, Shinichi, under the pseudonym Conan Edogawa, must solve the most difficult cases while he tries to find an antidote that will return him to normal...
Tad would love for his archaeologist colleagues to accept him as one of their own, but he always ends up messing it up.
Urusei Yatsura (うる星やつら) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Rumiko Takahashi and serialized in Shogakukan's Weekly Shōnen Sunday from September 1978 to February 1987. Its 366 individual chapters were published in 34 tankōbon volumes. It tells the story of Ataru Moroboshi, and the alien Lum, who believes she is Ataru's wife after he accidentally proposes to her. The series makes heavy use of Japanese mythology, culture and puns.
Movies and series based in the What We Do in the Shadows franchise.
"Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" is a 19th-century German fairy tale that is today known widely across the Western world. The Brothers Grimm published it in 1812 in the first edition of their collection Grimms' Fairy Tales and numbered as Tale 53. The original German title was Sneewittchen, a Low German form, but the first version gave the High German translation Schneeweißchen, and the tale has become known in German by the mixed form Schneewittchen. The Grimms completed their final revision of the story in 1854, which can be found in the in 1957 version of Grimms' Fairy Tales.
There is a serial killer in the story or the story is mainly about a serial killer.
The Golden Age of Disney Animation began with the release of Snow White in 1937. The term ‘Golden Age’ doesn’t necessarily refer to the success of these films because, besides Snow White, most of the films in the Golden Age were largely unsuccessful at the time of their release. Most of them only gained “Classic Status” years later. ‘Golden Age’ more accurately refers to the quality and technical achievements of the era’s animation. Walt spent almost every cent he made during this time on the next masterpiece. He focused on making each film better than the last, ushering in visions of great art and innovation. Unfortunately, this ‘Age of Art’ was cut short by the advent of a worldwide war…
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