Up: 3D Edition
…and the dogs from Up were involved in as we met them in the movie. Introducing us to Dug in this way in the film wouldn’t have given us the… |
Little lost Fievel coming home at last!
Deep within the pages of {{link http://homevideo.universalstudios.com/catalog.php?Category=GenreKey&Keywords=Animated Universal Home Video}}’s website, a little digging reveals a date for the Steven Spielberg/Don Bluth 1986 collaboration An American Tail has been set… |
The Incredibles
…at the time were inevitable: not only does the film feature the emotional identity crises of its leading characters, but Mr Incredible rescues a train from certain doom in a… |
Superman: The Motion Picture Anthology
…keeping them from talking to each other in case of a flare-up, another director was waiting in the wings to step in if tensions became intolerably unbearable. Again, the production… |
The Rescuers / The Rescuers Down Under: 35th Anniversary 2-Movie Collection
…originally released in 1977, Disney recalled over three million copies and again the title languished in the vault. After the Studio’s initial Limited Issue and Gold Collection DVD releases came… |
The Secret Life of Pets
…then Max and the neighborhood pets. Very early on in both films the newcomer is introduced. Buzz crash lands on Andy’s bed and Duke is introduced into Katie’s home. It’s… |
San Diego 2016 Comic-Con Exclusive
…was in the vein of Calvin and Hobbes. It featured a one-eyed cat that was presumably modeled after a character that would have appeared in American Dog, the film that… |
Bolt
…film that fits in a sly swipe at why the recent Indiana Jones disappointment was so inadequate is a good’un in my book, and despite its shortcomings, Bolt comes recommended… |
Pixar Short Films Collection: Volume 2
…down to the supplements in this new package of shorts to really impress and draw in the interested, since the majority of the “main feature” cartoons have been readily available… |
A History of DreamWorks Animation: Part Two – There Is Now A Level Zero
…the lead, they released films that covered all forms of animation – hand-drawn, stop-motion, and computer generated – in an attempt to compete with the industry elite in Disney, from… |