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GoPro Transit
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 17 มี.ค. 2020
This is a channel where I will film bus transits lines Bus, Train, Subway Etc. I will be recording them on a GoPro on a bus in a full ride no cuts it’s a full ride in its different routes I hope you enjoy them.
LA Metro (LACMTA) Bus 158 (Westbound) Chatsworth Station - Full Ride
The full length trip of the Westbound 158 LACMTA (LA Metro) Route.
Bus: LACMTA 2016 New Flyer XN40 #4106.
NOTE: Sorry for my long absence for nearly 2 years. I have been in an odd state in my mind but I am thankful to say that I have returned and will be uploading when I complete everything I need to do. Thank You.
Bus: LACMTA 2016 New Flyer XN40 #4106.
NOTE: Sorry for my long absence for nearly 2 years. I have been in an odd state in my mind but I am thankful to say that I have returned and will be uploading when I complete everything I need to do. Thank You.
มุมมอง: 300
วีดีโอ
LACMTA 2020 New Flyer XN60 #8775 12-11-22
มุมมอง 2.3K2 ปีที่แล้ว
S2 E20 Short Ride on LA Metro Local Bus 233 to Lake View Terrace Via Van Nuys Blvd Bus : New Flyer XN60 #8775 Engine : Cummins Westport L9N Transmission : Allison B500R Date : December 11th 2022
LA Metro Rail (K) Crenshaw Line (Northbound) to Expo / Crenshaw Full Ride 10-8-22
มุมมอง 3.9K2 ปีที่แล้ว
S2 E19 The brand new K Line or The Crenshaw Line has opened! I went to go see and film it on it's second day of being opened. LACMTA (K) Crenshaw Line Northbound to Expo / Crenshaw Running Thru : Florence Ave. and Crenshaw Blvd. Line Version 1 Train : 2017 Kinkisharyo P3010 #1207 Shot On : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed On : October 8th 2022 Sorry for the long wait school hasn't been that nice to me with...
LA Metro Rail (K) Crenshaw Line (Southbound) to Westchester / Veterans Full Ride 10-8-22
มุมมอง 6K2 ปีที่แล้ว
S2 E18 The brand new K Line or The Crenshaw Line has opened! I went to go see and film it on it's second day of being opened. LACMTA (K) Crenshaw Line Southbound to Westchester / Veterans. Running Thru : Crenshaw Blvd and Florence Ave. Line Version 1 Train : 2018* Kinkisharyo P3010 #1220 Shot On : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed On : October 8th 2022 Sorry for the long wait school hasn't been that nice to...
LA Metro Bus 16 (Eastbound) To Downtown LA Full Ride 7-22-22
มุมมอง 4.9K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA Bus 16 Eastbound To Downtown LA Via : 3rd St and 5th St Bus : 2014 New Flyer XN40 #5970 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on July 22nd 2022
LA Metro Bus 16 (Westbound) To West Hollywood Full Ride 7-22-22
มุมมอง 5K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA Bus 16 Westbound To West Hollywood Via : 6th St and 3rd St Bus : 2011 NABI 45C CNG #8439 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on July 22nd 2022
LA Metro (L) Gold Line (Southbound) to Atlantic Full Ride 7-7-22
มุมมอง 10K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA (L) Gold Line Southbound To Atlantic Train : 2007 Ansaldobreda P2550 #715 - 2016 Kinkisharyo P3010 #1163 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on : July 7th 2021 I decided to film the (L) Gold Line early since they will be replacing it with the (A) Blue Line going to APU Citrus and the (E) Expo Line to Atlantic due to the Regional Connector project that will make traveling to 7th Street Metro C...
LA Metro Bus 14 (Eastbound) to Downtown LA Full Ride 6-19-22
มุมมอง 6K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA Bus 14 Westbound To Beverly Center Via : Beverly Blvd / Grand Ave Bus : 2015 New Flyer XN40 #6055 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on June 19th, 2022
LA Metro Bus 14 (Westbound) To Beverly Center Full Ride 6-19-22
มุมมอง 4.2K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA Bus 14 Westbound To Beverly Center Via : Olive St / Beverly Blvd Bus : 2015 New Flyer XN40 #6055 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on June 19th, 2022
(Audio Recording) #4103 LACMTA 2016 New Flyer XN40
มุมมอง 1.8K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Route : 237 Eastbound Engine : Cummins Westport ISL-G Transmission : Allison B400R Recorded on May 30th 2022
LA Metro Bus 10 (Eastbound) to Downtown LA Full Ride 5-30-22
มุมมอง 4.7K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA 10 Eastbound to Downtown LA Bus : 2014 NewFlyer XN40 #6029 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on May 30th 2022
LA Metro bus 10 (Westbound) to West Hollywood Full Ride 5-30-22
มุมมอง 13K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA 10 Westbound to West Hollywood Bus : 2013 NewFlyer XN40 #5639 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on May 30th 2022
LA Metro Bus 4 (Eastbound) To Downtown LA Full Ride 5-15-22
มุมมอง 6K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA 4 Eastbound to Santa Monica Bus : 2008 Nabi 60-BRT #9573 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on May 15th, 2022
LA Metro Bus 4 (Westbound) To Santa Monica Full Ride 5-15-22
มุมมอง 9K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA 4 Westbound to Santa Monica Bus : 2008 Nabi 60-BRT #9566 Shot on : GoPro Hero 10 Filmed on May 15th, 2022
LACMTA Bus 2 (Westbound) To Westwood/UCLA Full Ride 1-28-22
มุมมอง 4.5K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LACMTA Bus 2 (Westbound) To Westwood/UCLA Full Ride 1-28-22
LA Metro Bus 2 (Eastbound) To USC/Expo Park Full Ride 1-28-22
มุมมอง 7K2 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro Bus 2 (Eastbound) To USC/Expo Park Full Ride 1-28-22
(Audio Recording) #1643 LACMTA 2019 ENC Axxes BRT 40 CNG
มุมมอง 1.5K2 ปีที่แล้ว
(Audio Recording) #1643 LACMTA 2019 ENC Axxes BRT 40 CNG
LA Metro bus 212 (Southbound) to Praire / Keslo. 12-3-21
มุมมอง 6K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro bus 212 (Southbound) to Praire / Keslo. 12-3-21
LA Metro (G) Orange Line To Van Nuys 12-2-21 (Afternoon Run)
มุมมอง 7K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro (G) Orange Line To Van Nuys 12-2-21 (Afternoon Run)
LADOT Dash Observatory/Los Feliz Full Ride to Griffith Observatory 11-23-21
มุมมอง 14K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LADOT Dash Observatory/Los Feliz Full Ride to Griffith Observatory 11-23-21
LA Metro (C) Green Line to Crenshaw 10-31-21 (Noon Run)
มุมมอง 9K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro (C) Green Line to Crenshaw 10-31-21 (Noon Run)
LA Metro (J) Silver Line 910 To Harbor Fwy 10-31-21 (Noon Run)
มุมมอง 9K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro (J) Silver Line 910 To Harbor Fwy 10-31-21 (Noon Run)
LA Metro Red (B) Line to 7th Street Metro Center. Late Morning Run 10-31-21
มุมมอง 12K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro Red (B) Line to 7th Street Metro Center. Late Morning Run 10-31-21
LA Metro Orange (G) Line to North Hollywood. Late Morning Run 10-31-21 ft. Clown
มุมมอง 12K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro Orange (G) Line to North Hollywood. Late Morning Run 10-31-21 ft. Clown
LA Metro Bus 237 to Woodley / Devonshire 10-24-21
มุมมอง 3.9K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro Bus 237 to Woodley / Devonshire 10-24-21
LA Metro Bus 167 to Roscoe / Van Nuys 10-24-21
มุมมอง 11K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro Bus 167 to Roscoe / Van Nuys 10-24-21
LA Metro bus 761 to Van Nuys / Chase 10-9-21 (Late noon run)
มุมมอง 10K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro bus 761 to Van Nuys / Chase 10-9-21 (Late noon run)
LA Metro Bus 155 to Burbank Station (Morning Run) 10-2-21
มุมมอง 6K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro Bus 155 to Burbank Station (Morning Run) 10-2-21
LA Metro Bus 222 to Riverside / Moorpark (Morning Run) 10-2-21
มุมมอง 2.9K3 ปีที่แล้ว
LA Metro Bus 222 to Riverside / Moorpark (Morning Run) 10-2-21
You must put yourself first before your audience, I understand
Your back from TH-cam
Cada cuánto tiempo hay salida ?
Tomorrow I'm going to do a video of metro bus 105
Pierce Collage [sic]? You surely must mean Pierce College.
Sorry your name isn't Shirley, is it?
Unfortunately now the route 4 it only runs from Santa Monica beach to Union Station it doesn't go to Hill St & Venice Bl under the 10 freeway "bus terminal" any more since last year since the 704 Rapid route was terminated. It only runs now from Santa Monica beach to Union Station the final stop. By the way I see it now the 704 rapid route merge to route 4.
Inversiónessss de ss en transporte como se hacen 🎉?
1:20:12 Azusa downtown station
I do the part 2 later❤ in the other video
Nice part 2
0:52 goes to the to be ready to ride 1:57 tap card tap 2:32 gets in the metro 4:09 east la civic center 5:21 maravilla 8:51 Indiana station 11:46 soto 13:33 mariachi plaza 15:47 pico aliso 16:12 gets out the metro 18:09 goes inside the bus 28:41 arrives at union st 29:50 goes inside union 32:17 metrolink comes 32:57 metro arrives 33:10 goes inside metro 35:11 Chinatown 39:37 lincoin heights 41:11 heritage square/arroyo 43:15 Southwest museum 47:18 highland park 50:46 south Pasadena 53:38 fillmore 55:33 del mar 57:07 memorial Park 59:22 lake 1:01:16 allen 1:04:19 sirrrea villa 1:08:51 Arcadia 1:11:35 Monrovia 1:14:43 duarte city of hope 1:17:51 irwindale 1:20:21 Azusa downtown 1:21:53 arrived to circus college Rided: kinkisharyo p3010 and ansaldobreda p2550 I took me hours to finish this comment 😢 Thanks for zero likes L line and S line Thanks for watching 1:22:17 The favorite part in 0:01 bye in going to sleep nice day
Phineas received a new pet, Goldie. He and Ferb built a backyard aquarium for her, complete with whales, dolphins, and octopi to keep her company. Dr. Doofenshmirtz's creation froze the aquarium, and it was released into the wild after being accidentally (and unknowingly) pushed by Candace. Phineas and Ferb discovered an alien named Meap in their backyard one day. Phineas states that Meap is one of the most adorable things in the world. When Meap ran off, Phineas went out to search for him with a tracker while Ferb repaired his spaceship. He later revealed to Isabella that he thought she was very cute. They discovered that Meap was really an intergalactic security agent, and helped him defeat his nemesis, Mitch. One night, while Phineas and Ferb are sleeping, Perry disappears into his lair and is told by Major Monogram that he will be assigned to a new villain, and also, a new family. Perry then leaves the following morning, leaving Phineas in a state of depression and sadness. Phineas decides to host an awareness campaign (much like he did for the aglets) and sings a song about Perry. Perry then arrives, cheering Phineas up automatically. Phineas, Ferb, Candace, their parents, and Isabella get shipwrecked on a deserted island after a storm. Lawrence asks Phineas and Ferb to help build a shelter where they can stay inside, and Phineas and Ferb do so. However, they overdo it and instead make some sort of vacation home. Despite that they were only doing what their dad said, Candace tries to bust them (the only reason being that she's angry they didn't build something that would reach the mainland). On a visit to the beach, Phineas, Ferb, Isabella, Baljeet, Buford, and their uninvited "friend", Irving goes out to look for the lost city of Atlantis. On Tri-State Area Unification Day, Phineas and his friends decide to hijack the parade to show what Tri-State unification is all about, making giant floats of themselves, and even have Love Handel preform. Buford makes several attempts to interrupt the parade, but Phineas took precautions and managed to escape his traps. After the floats had literally floated away, Phineas and his friends continue the parade by simply pulling wagons. During high school, Phineas developed romantic feelings toward Isabella, but fearing that his feelings for her would be unrequited, he never admitted them to her. Phineas did very well for himself in his older teen years, as evidenced by a shin-deep pile of acceptance letters he received from colleges and universities around the world. After a period of indecisiveness regarding which of these schools he should attend, he eventually found himself torn between two choices: Danville University or Tri-State State College. Near the end of that summer, he learned that Isabella had been harboring a crush on him for many years, and after finding out that she was leaving for college two weeks earlier than most because of the many extracurricular activities she was involved in at the school, he attempted to track her down so he could admit his feelings to her before she left. He eventually found her in front of his house, where she had been waiting to say good-bye to him before leaving. Here, the two finally admitted their feelings for each other. After learning that the school Isabella will be attending will be Tri-State State, Phineas decided that he would go to that school too so he could begin a romantic relationship with her. They happily embraced, with the promise that they would see each other again in two weeks, at the start of the semester. The following events may or may not have been rewritten due to time travel intervention: In the 2020's, twenty years after they built the Coolest Coaster Ever, Phineas had earned an award that was presented to him in Switzerland. Prior to that, either he or Ferb married Isabella, as she was introduced to Candace's future children as "Aunt Isabella". Which of the two married her was not specifically stated, though with the existence of "Act Your Age", it would have most likely been Phineas. Phineas appeared in all 20 episodes of the talk show spin-off of the series, talking with celebrities about various things. In the episode with Regis Philbin, he talked about who he likes best, but when it was revealed that it was his mom, Isabella got mad. He starts his day in his bed and when the clock goes off, he and Ferb dance to "Everything's Better with Perry". They build a platypult to go to Buford, but it hits Perry's car, sending it to Heinz Doofenshmirtz's building and destroying his Other-Dimension-Inator. He then fixes it and all they go to another dimension see the 2nd Dimension Heinz Doofenshmirtz. He later found out about Perry's secret agent life, resulting in Phineas becoming angry. They (except Heinz) go to Phineas-2 and Ferb-2's house, where they wear Dooferalls. Both Phineases sing "Summer (Where Do We Begin?)" in the house as well as both Ferbs. Later, Phineas goes to the Resistance to meet Isabella-2 and her Firestorm Girls troop. Phineas makes what he calls his best hit ever, striking a baseball at the device Doof-2 was using. Before Phineas-1 gets his memory erased, he gets a kiss from Isabella-1. He also sings the song "Kick It Up a Notch" during the end credits of the movie. Phineas makes an appearance alongside Ferb in the episode "The Phineas and Ferb Effect". He is first seen with Ferb in the episode when they use their giant robot to save Candace, Buford, Baljeet, Melissa Chase, and Zack Underwood from the Pistachions and later meets Milo Murphy and his dog, Diogee. Phineas makes a brief cameo in Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers, as one of the bootlegged victims. He is seen fleeing from a shipping container with the other toons after being freed by the FBI, having been mixed with Gogo Dodo from Tiny Toon Adventures.
Toy Story has received universal critical acclaim since its release in 1995. It holds a rare 100% Certified Fresh rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes and 92/100 on Metacritic. Time named it the 8th best film of 1995. In 2003 it was ranked 'the greatest animated movie of all time' by the Online Film Critics Society. More recently, famous movie director Terry Gilliam praised the film and said it's "a work of genius. It got people to understand what toys are about. They're true to their own character. And that's just brilliant. It's got a shot that's always stuck with me when Buzz Lightyear discovers he's a toy. He's sitting on this landing at the top of the staircase and the camera pulls back and he's this tiny little figure. He was this guy with a massive ego two seconds before... and it's stunning. I'd put that as one of my top ten films, period." Toy Story was the number one movie of the year in 1995 (beating Batman Forever and Apollo 13), according to Box Office Mojo. It opened the day before Thanksgiving and made almost $10 million on Wednesday and Thursday, plus another $29 million over the weekend. It was the number one film for its first 3 weekends, and then again the last weekend of December. During its theatrical run, it grossed $191.8 million domestically and $362 million worldwide. At the time it was the third highest-grossing animated film, behind The Lion King and Aladdin. Although this movie was rated G in the United States, it was rated PG in the United Kingdom, likely due to Sid's violence and the ordeal with the mutant toys in his bedroom. Initial theatrical screenings of the film included a reissue of a Roger Rabbit short Rollercoaster Rabbit, while select screenings at the time included The Adventures of André and Wally B., a pre-Pixar short film that was produced by Lucasfilm in 1984. Though most home video releases do not include either of these shorts, the 2000 VHS reprint of Toy Story includes Tin Toy, Pixar's short film released in 1988. Four years later, Toy Story was followed by a sequel titled Toy Story 2 which was released in theaters on November 24, 1999. Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Annie Potts, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Jim Varney, Don Rickles, John Morris, Laurie Metcalf, R. Lee Ermey and Jeff Pidgeon all reprised the roles of their respective characters for the sequel. The film focused on Woody being stolen a greedy toy collector named Al McWhiggin (voiced by Wayne Knight) who plans to sell him to a toy museum in Tokyo, Japan and Buzz leading Rex, Hamm, Mr. Potato Head and Slinky Dog on a mission to save him. Eleven more years later, Toy Story was followed by a second sequel titled Toy Story 3 which was released in theaters and 3D on June 18, 2010. Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Don Rickles, John Morris, Laurie Metcalf, R. Lee Ermey and Jeff Pidgeon again reprised their character roles in this sequel. Jim Varney, who voiced Slinky in Toy Story 1 and 2 died in February 2000, three months after the theatrical released of Toy Story 2. In Toy Story 3, Slinky was Varney's good friend Blake Clark. The only still living Toy Story cast member who didn't return for the sequel was Annie Potts, the voice of Bo Peep, though her character made a brief silent cameo in the movie's opening. The third film focuses on Andy growing up and leaving for college and Woody, Buzz and the rest of his remaining toys accidentally donated to a Day Care Centre where they meet some not so friendly toys. Once there, Woody and his friends must get back to Andy before he leaves. It was announced in November 2014 that Pixar was working on a third sequel, Toy Story 4, which was released in theaters on June 21, 2019. The film focuses on a new "toy" that Bonnie creates named Forky, and Woody helping him realize what being a toy is all about. One year after Toy Story was released, there were ABC shorts called Toy Story Treats. In 2000, Pixar released a Buzz Lightyear spin-off film called Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins which later led to a TV series titled Buzz Lightyear of Star Command which aired 2000-2001. In 2011 and 2012, Pixar released three shorts film that follows the events of Toy Story 3 titled Toy Story Toons. The first one titled Hawaiian Vacation was released in theaters and 3D June 24, 2011, with Cars 2. The second one, Small Fry was released in theatres November 23, 2011, with The Muppets. The third one, Partysaurus Rex was released in theaters and 3D September 14, 2012 with the 3D-re-release of Finding Nemo. Plus Woody, Buzz, Rex and Mr. Potato Head has recently appeared in two television specials titled Toy Story of TERROR! and Toy Story That Time Forgot. See Merchandise Toy Story had a large promotion prior to its release, leading to numerous tie-ins with the movie, including images on food packaging. A variety of merchandise was released during the film's theatrical run and its initial VHS release including toys, clothing, and shoes, among other things. When an action figure for Buzz Lightyear and Sheriff Woody was created it was initially ignored by retailers. However, after over 250,000 figures were sold for each character prior to the movie's release, demand continued to expand, eventually reaching over 25 million units sold by 2007. Blu-ray.com: Toy Story 'Toy Story': The Inside Buzz Box Office Mojo: Toy Story (1995) Toy Story English (Audio Description) th-cam.com/video/tslD04yOhe0/w-d-xo.html Jack Angel's Résumé. Arlene Thornton & Associates Inc. Spencer Aste Reel (1:43-2:06) Craig Good Voice Demo Reel (0:12-:17) Jeff Kays' email communication with Debi Derryberry, April 29, 2010. Pixar.com Do I want to?!
The first episode, "Rollercoaster", garnered a total of 10.8 million viewers when aired as a preview on August 17, 2007, holding onto more than half the record-setting audience of its lead-in, High School Musical 2. When Phineas and Ferb officially debuted in February the next year, it proved cable's number one watched animated series premiere by "tweens." Throughout the first quarter that followed, it peaked as the top-rated animated TV series for ages 6-10 and 9-14, also becoming number three animated series for all of cable television for viewers age 6-10. By the time the commissioning of the second season was announced in May 2008, the series had become a top-rated program in the 6-11 and 9-14 age groups. Disney Channel's airing of "Phineas and Ferb Get Busted" was watched by 3.7 million viewers. The episodes "Perry Lays an Egg" and "Gaming the System" on Disney Channel achieved the most views by ages 6-11 and 9-14 of any channel in that night's time slot. This achievement propelled the series to the number one animated telecast that week for the target demographics. On June 7, 2009, Disney announced that the show had become the number one primetime animated television show for the demographics 6-10 and 9-14. The premiere of "Phineas and Ferb's Christmas Vacation" garnered 2.62 million viewers during its debut on Disney XD, the most watched telecast in the channel's history (including Toon Disney) and the number three program of the night in all demographics. It received 5.2 million viewers for its debut on Disney Channel. It was the highest-rated episode of the series to date and 5th highest for the week. The premiere of "Phineas and Ferb Summer Belongs to You!" garnered 3.862 million viewers, was watched by 22% of kids 2-11, 13% of teens, 5% of households, and 3% of adults 18-49, also being the #1 program on that night and it was 25th for the week in viewership. On Disney XD, the episode ranked in the channel's top 3 telecasts of the year in viewers with 1.32 million, and Boys 6-11 with 365,000, with a 2.9 rating. The hour-long telecast on August 2, 2010, is currently the Emmy-winning animated series' No. 2 telecast of all time on Disney XD in Total Viewers, in kids 6-14 with 677,000 and a 1.9 rating, Boys 6-14 with 435,000 and a 2.3 rating, and kids 6-11 with 542,000 and a 2.2 rating, Boys 6-11 and Boys 9-14 235,000 with a 1.9 rating, behind only December 2009's "Phineas and Ferb Christmas Vacation!" On September 9, 2011, the episode "My Fair Goalie" had 4.65 million viewers watch it, the most for a regular episode. Eleven other episodes had also hit the 4-million mark, 5 times in 2011 alone. Disney has licensed a number of products from the show, including plush toys of characters Perry, Ferb, Phineas, and Candace. Disney released several T-shirts for the show and launched a "Make your own T-shirt" program on its Disney website. Authors have novelized several episodes. Two season one DVDs, entitled "The Fast and the Phineas" and "The Daze of Summer", have been released; the discs include episodes never broadcast in America. A third DVD was released on October 5, 2010, called "A Very Perry Christmas". A fourth one, called "The Perry Files", was released on June 5, 2012. Some reviewers were displeased that the discs covered selected episodes rather than providing box sets of the whole series, but noted that Disney does not generally release full-season DVD sets. On February 3, 2009, Disney licensed a Nintendo DS game, titled like the show, Phineas and Ferb. The game's story follows the title characters as they try to build a roller coaster to stop boredom over the summer (in reference to the show's pilot episode). The player controls Phineas, Ferb, and occasionally Agent P (Perry the Platypus). Phineas scavenges for spare parts for the rollercoaster while Ferb fixes various objects around town, gaining access to new areas as a result. Ferb can also construct new parts of the rollercoaster and its vehicle-themed carts. Each activity features a short mini-game. The game was well received and garners a 76.67% on GameRankings. A sequel entitled "Phineas and Ferb Ride Again", was released on September 14, 2010. Dan Povenmire and Jeff "Swampy" Marsh also announced that there is a Phineas and Ferb Wii game in development. It was later confirmed that this game would be a video game adaptation of the TV movie, also available for Nintendo DS and PlayStation 3, which was released August 2, 2011. The United Kingdom Disney Channel has aired a series entitled Oscar and Michael's Phineas and Ferb Fan Club Show in homage to the animated TV series. The show features two boys who attempt to be like Phineas and Ferb by taking part in adventures to alleviate boredom. The series aims at educating kids and promoting activity and creativity. It entered its second season on April 10, 2009. Phineas and Ferb also has been briefly referenced in a few literary works in recent years. Love Through the Eyes of an Idiot: A True Story of Finding the Secret of Love and Romance uses an analysis that states that a woman the author met was the "Phineas to his Ferb." Lost and Found: How Churches Are Connecting to Young Adults uses the titular characters of the show as an example of television characters who have an impact on the lives of children and the family they live with. Almost every episode has had at least one musical performance (except for "Lights, Candace, Action!", "I Was a Middle Aged Robot", and "The Lizard Whisperer"). "Rollercoaster: The Musical!" and Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension currently tie for the record of most songs at 9 songs each. Povenmire recalls, "When we were writing Rocko, we always had one of two things, sometimes both: usually a song or a musical number, plus a big action/chase scene. Phineas and Ferb gave us a chance to write a song for every single episode, starting with the third episode, "Flop Starz". We played it and Perry's secret agent theme for the Disney executives. We were a little trepidatious because Disney has a big history of music ― what if they hate it? The reaction was, "These are great ― can you write a song for every episode?". Nearly every episode has a song so that they won't use it over and over for a different season. The music on Phineas and Ferb goes from the whimsical to heavy metal. Composer Danny Jacob, along with Povenmire, Marsh, and story editor Martin Olson strive to include all genres of music, because they feel this variety enriches the animation experience and exposes kids to music they wouldn't otherwise have been aware of. Early in the show's production, Disney questioned this policy, but as Povenmire explains, "It's similar to when we realized that Bugs Bunny was using classical music. When I heard 'The Barber of Seville' for the first time after watching Bugs Bunny, I had a way of relating to it that made me think of it differently than if I had just heard it on the radio. You have a familiarity to it. Now, when kids hear a Frank Sinatra like a jazz tune, or a Busby Berkeley kind of tune, they'll have a frame of reference for it." They use good music so it can mix in and flow with the movie. This has been on for a while now, that they have used Phineas and Ferb movie to feature it to show that if you use jazz tunes and other music it will sound good with other things, not only with the same movie.
The show uses four major writers to devise story ideas according to "strict guidelines", such as that the boys' schemes never appear to be "magical." Stories are reviewed at weekly sessions on a Monday, then simultaneously scripted and storyboarded. A very rough design is built before the storyboard, featuring little more than suggested scenes and dialogue, is drafted; the writers then gather for a "play-by-play" walkthrough of the storyboard in front of the whole crew, whose reactions to the jokes are assessed before rewrites are made. The writers as well include running gags in every episode, which are generally lines spoken by characters. Almost every episode is set into two eleven-minute segments. Rough Draft Studios in South Korea, Wang Film Productions in Taiwan, and Synergy Animation and Hong Ying Animation in Shanghai animated the series in 2-D animation using the software packages Toon Boom. Povenmire undertakes the bulk of production direction, along with Marsh, Jay Lender, Sue Perrotto, Zac Moncrief, and Robert Hughes. The series adopts artistic features from animator Tex Avery, such as geometric shapes integrated into characters, objects, and backgrounds. Dan Povenmire said of this inclusion, "There's a little bit of Tex Avery in there-he had that very graphic style (in his later cartoons)." Triangles (shaped like Phineas' head) are featured as an Easter egg in the background of every episode, sometimes in trees or buildings. Other shapes, such as rectangles (Ferb's head shape) and semicircles (Candace's head shape) can show up often. Bright colors are also a prominent element of the animation. Marsh elaborates, "The idea at the end of the day was candy. One of the things that I think works so well is that the characters are so bright and candy-colored and our backgrounds are a much more realistic depiction of the world: the soft green of the grass, the natural woods for the fence. In order for all of the stuff that they do to work, their world needs to be grounded in reality." The designers sought to keep their characters visually simple, so that kids "would easily be able to draw [them] themselves." Characters were also crafted to be recognizable from a distance, a technique the creators say is based on Matt Groening's goal of making characters recognizable by silhouette. The plots grew from Povenmire's childhood in Mobile, Alabama. His mother was always encouraging them to do creative things rather than watch television. One of his activities was making home movies. Povenmire says, "My mom let me drape black material all the way across one end of our living room to use as a space field. I would hang little models of spaceships for these little movies I made with a Super 8 camera." Phineas Flynn (Vincent Martella) and Ferb Fletcher (Thomas Sangster) are stepbrothers who live with their older sister Candace Flynn (Ashley Tisdale) and their parents Linda Flynn-Fletcher (Caroline Rhea) and Lawrence Fletcher (Richard O'Brien) in the town of Danville. The brothers find themselves dissatisfied just spending their summer vacation outside of school, so, they pull off unbelievable and often outlandish stunts (i.e. finding a mummy, getting a band back together, racing cars, constructing a giant roller coaster, just to name some), in order to make summer more exciting. Their sister, Candace, is aware of their unusual activities and tries to play a spoil-sport (busting) by telling their mom so that the adventures of Phineas and Ferb could be put to an end. Candace's actions emerge mostly out of jealousy because she would not be able to get away with the same acts, since she gets "busted" for things she wasn't even intending to do, like throwing a party. ("Candace Gets Busted"). In the end, the boys' inventions disappear right when Candace is about to bust them. Phineas and Ferb's pet, Perry the Platypus (Dee Bradley Baker), is actually a secret agent named, "Agent P Normally, Perry's first appearance in a story is after someone (usually Phineas) notices his absence and asks "Hey, where's Perry?" After the question is asked, the scene usually changes right to Perry entering secret chutes or entrances that bring him to some underground headquarters where he receives instructions, via a monitor, from his boss Major Monogram, head of the O.W.C.A. (Jeff "Swampy" Marsh) (However, in some cases, Perry is simply shown in the base receiving a briefing (e.g. "Undercover Carl"). Major Monogram thеn assigns Perry some mission that generally involves Heinz Doofenshmirtz (Dan Povenmire), and his nefarious plans to wreak havoc on the Tri-State Area (though this is not always the case). A majority of the Perry subplot involves him battling Dr. Doofenshmirtz in knowingly hackneyed fashion (such as Doofenshmirtz's long monologues about his plans to Perry), this sub-plot also includes, sometimes, the sarcasm of Vanessa Doofenshmirtz (Olivia Olson); Doofenshmirtz's beautiful daughter, and Norm (John Viener); Doofenshmirtz's self-aware robot. Inevitably, these battles are brought very near where Phineas and Ferb are doing whatever plan they had for the day, and generally aid in the removal of all evidence related to what they were doing before Candace can show her mother what Phineas and Ferb have/ been up to. Sometimes this works backward, and Phineas and Ferb's invention destroys Doofenshmirtz's invention. ("Hail Doofania", "Thaddeus and Thor" and Phineas and Ferb The Movie: Across the Second Dimension) The creators of Phineas and Ferb chose Perry to be a platypus, because they thought dogs and cats are overused in TV shows. Occasionally, there are sub-plots relating to Candace during the stories. They generally involve either Candace chatting, hanging out with her friend Stacy (Kelly Hu), or attempting to get the attention of her crush, Jeremy (Mitchel Musso). These subplots commonly weave in with Candace's many attempts to bust Phineas and Ferb for their inventions, which ends in failure. The show has received generally very positive reviews. The New York Times commented favorably, describing the show as "Family Guy with an espionage subplot and a big dose of magical realism". It considered the pop-culture references ubiquitous "but [placed] with such skill that it seems smart, not cheap." Whitney Matheson wrote in her USA Today blog "Pop Candy" that the series was an achievement in children's programming. Matheson applauded the writing and called it "an animated version of Parker Lewis Can't Lose." Emily Ashby of Common Sense Media praised the show's humor and plot, giving it three out of five stars. The Seattle Times wrote that the story of the show was "valiant" and that the main characters of Phineas and Ferb were "young heroes". As of 2023, it currently holds the #2 spot on Ranker's "The Best Disney Channel Cartoons Ever Made" list (Right behind Gravity Falls). WatchMojo placed the show at the #2 spot in their "Top 20 Best Disney Animated TV Series", with Gravity Falls also being placed as #1.[4] Variety noted the show's appeal to all ages with its "sense of wit and irreverence." Similar reviews have emphasized the series' popularity with adults; Elastic Pops Rebecca Wright wrote, in a review for the volume one DVD, "As an adult, I really enjoyed watching this Phineas and Ferb DVD, and I think it is one that the whole family can enjoy." Wright also called the series' "irreverent style" reminiscent of The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle. Wired's Matt Blum has stated in reviews on the series that he "can stand to watch just about anything with (his) kids, but he actually looks forward to watching Phineas and Ferb with them." Notable adult celebrities who have openly considered themselves fans of the series include Bob Eubanks, Anthony LaPaglia, Ben Stiller, Chaka Khan, Jeff Sullivan, and Jake Gyllenhaal. Among the negative reviews is one that charges the series with a lack of originality. Maxie Zeus of Toon Zone argued that the show is "derivative, but obviously so, and shorn of even the best features of what has been stolen." Zeus took issue with the writing, feeling that certain jokes and conventions were "ripped-off" from other shows. Kevin McDonough of Sun Coast Today criticized the show for its plot complexity, constant action, and "characters [that] can do just about anything." McDonough stated that "it's never clear whether P&F are intended to entertain children or are merely a reflection of grown-up animators engaged in a juvenile lark." Marylin Moss of The Hollywood Reporter described Phineas and Ferb as "Pretty mindless but kids of all ages might find a humorous moment in it." Moss called the plot lines redundant but did praise the music styles and guest stars. The series won a "Cynopsis Kids Animation" in June 2012 for the movie.
Do this?! Phineas and Ferb is an American animated comedy-musical sitcom that centers around two stepbrothers, Phineas Flynn and Ferb Fletcher, their sister, Candace, their pet platypus, Perry, and their adventures during summer vacation. The series aired on both Disney Channel and Disney XD. The series premiered worldwide on February 1, 2008. It is also the first Disney Channel Original Show to premiere simultaneously in all territories. The show's official US premiere was marketed as Phineas and Ferb-uary, due to new episodes being shown on many of the days during the month of February. Many of the show's voice actors also appear on other Disney Channel TV shows, such as Hannah Montana and The Suite Life of Zack & Cody. On August 25, 2011, the show was picked up for its fourth and final season on Disney Channel, later known to be 37 episodes, a possible spin-off on Isabella and the Fireside Girls and a feature film for the series. The series also had a live show that was shown in over 80 different cities across the United States. On June 9, 2014, Phineas and Ferb broke the all-time record of half-hour episodes, set by Dumbo's Circus with 120. It is Disney Channel's longest-running original animated Series, beating Kim Possible's 5 years and 3 months. On July 25, 2014, Dan and Swampy announced that there are 20 unaired episodes of Season 4 remaining. Afterwards, they will take their first hiatus in 8 years.[1] The series ended after the hiatus in favor for the new spin-off series Milo Murphy's Law, which first aired in 2016 on Disney XD, which oddly enough, takes place in the same universe as Phineas and Ferb. The series' run ended on June 12, 2015 with its series finale special episode, as well as a standalone hour-long episode airing on November 9, 2015, on Disney XD and on January 15, 2016, on Disney Channel. It was the longest show to ever run beside Kim Possible which was second place. On January 13, 2023, the show was revived for a fifth and sixth season with 20 episodes each under Dan Povenmire's new overall deal with Disney Branded Television, along with the second season renewal for Hamster & Gretel.[2] On March 16, 2023, it was further announced that Marsh would also return to the revival as executive producer and voice director.[3] Creators Dan Povenmire and Jeff "Swampy" Marsh met as layout artists on The Simpsons in the mid-1990s, where they sat across from each other. They bonded over a shared sense of humor and were eventually paired as a writing team on Rocko's Modern Life for Nickelodeon where they learned more aspects of the animation production business. It was during the time that the pair started to develop a show that would allow them to continue working together as writers. At the Wild Thyme restaurant in South Pasadena, California, where they have butcher paper over the tables and crayons for you to draw with, Povenmire was sharing a meal with his wife when he drew the first sketch of a triangle-headed kid. Povenmire called Marsh that evening and told him the news: he had Phineas. All the other characters grew from that simple triangle-headed kid. Phineas is a triangle, Ferb is a rectangle, and Candace is a semicircle. The goal was to create simple characters that kids could easily draw on their own. They also created characters that were easily recognizable in silhouette, which is an old animation standard that Matt Groening taught Povenmire while he was working on The Simpsons. After the characters were set, they decided to work geometric shapes into the background to tie the whole thing together. Marsh describes this homage to legendary Looney Tunes animator/director, Tex Avery. "There's a little bit of Tex Avery in there - he had that very graphic style (in his later cartoons). A lot of what I see [in the series] now is borrowed from Tex." The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show provided additional inspiration in its format, where several different stories would be resolved together at the end of the episode. The color palette was originally a matter of discussion. Povenmire and Marsh wanted bright candy-colored characters with natural colors for the backgrounds. Marsh emphasized the need or all of "for all of the stuff that they do to work, their world needs to be grounded in reality." Disney wanted a more stylized palette. Povenmire recalled, "I actually had discussions with Disney about this because they wanted to come up with a cool color scheme. I just wanted it to feel like summer." The creators won out in the end. Povenmire and Marsh were no longer working together. Marsh had moved to London, England to work on an assortment of films and TV series including Postman Pat and Bounty Hamster. Povenmire had started animating and directing Family Guy episodes, but continued to shop the show around to Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon, and Fox Kids. Studios were worried about the complexity of the plots for the time allowed. At Fox, there were a few meetings, but negotiations fizzled out. Nickelodeon kept sending it up higher and higher in the production personnel ranks, but it was eventually deemed too difficult to pull off. Their stubbornness and persistence paid off when Povenmire finally got a meeting with Disney. According to Povenmire, "Disney was the first to say, 'Let's see if you can do it in 11 minutes.' We did it in the pilot, and they said, 'Let's see if you can do it for 26 episodes.'" Disney Channel's Senior VP of Original Series, Adam Bonnet was a fan of Family Guy and wasn't scared off by Povenmire's work on the series. In fact, it was because of his connections to the prime time Fox animated sitcom known for its gross-out gags and raunchy humor that Bonnet wanted to see whatever Povenmire was working on. Povenmire recalls about Bonnet, "He called me for a meeting when I was working on a different pilot for them just to tell me how much he liked Family Guy. When I came back to pitch my own show, I think he was more open to it." Povenmire brought "some of that prime time animation timing without any of the raunch" to Phineas and Ferb. In fact, many of the blank stares and sight gags have a prime time and Tex Avery charm to them. "People think Family Guy is a success because of how raunchy the gags are. I don't think it would have been a success at all if the timing wasn't absolutely crystal pitch perfect ― if there wasn't just the right amount of pause before or after the line. Comedy is all about timing, and I think that's what people are responding to." Unlike live-action TV series, they didn't show them a script. Instead, they pitched a storyboard. A storyboard is a scene-by-scene visual breakdown of how the episode would look. When it came time to present it to the executives overseas, Povenmire edited the storyboards together into a film, adding music, sound effects and providing the voices for all the characters. This animatic can be found on "The Fast and the Phineas (DVD)". The original story pitch eventually became the episode "Rollercoaster".
Lightyear premiered on June 8, 2022 and was theatrically released in the United States on June 17, 2022 by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, in RealD 3D, Dolby Cinema, and IMAX formats. It is the first theatrical release for Pixar in two years, since Soul, Luca, and Turning Red were assigned direct-to-streaming releases on Disney+ in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 75% approval rating with an average rating of 6.70/10, based on 246 reviews. The site's critical consensus reads, "Lightyear settles for being a rather conventional origin story instead of reaching for the stars, but this gorgeously animated adventure ably accomplishes its mission of straightforward fun." Metacritic reports a score of 60 out of 100 based on 57 critic reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews". The film has been disliked/criticized by audiences for its dark tone, character portrayals, and script, saying that it doesn't fit in with the spirit of the Toy Story franchise. This has made fans prefer Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, believing it to be a much better spin-off that expands on Buzz's lore and backstory, while fitting in with the franchise. The film has received criticism from some who have argued that the film's scene with a same-sex kiss, as well as Alisha Hawthorne's relationship with her partner, is inappropriate for children. This was contested by the scene showing support from both fans and Pixar employees, as well as helping the film reach more notoriety. As of June 19, 2022, Lightyear has grossed $50.6 million in the United States and Canada, and $34.6 million in other countries, for a worldwide total of $85.2 million. Being Pixar's first theatrical premiere in two years, it was expected to gross big numbers in revenue. In the United States and Canada, Lightyear was originally projected to gross $70-85 million from 4,255 theaters in its opening weekend, with some estimates reaching as high as $105 million. However, after making just $20.7 million on its first day (including $5.2 million from Thursday night previews), estimates were lowered to $51-55 million. It went on to debut to $50.6 million, finishing second behind holdover Jurassic World Dominion. Additionally, the film earned $34.6 million from 43 international markets, bringing its worldwide three-day debut to $85.2 million. Both Deadline Hollywood and Variety attributed the under-performance to competition from Minions: The Rise of Gru, Jurassic World and Top Gun: Maverick, though ultimately noted it as a disappointment given the brand strength of both Pixar and the Toy Story series. They also noted how the non-release on important markets like China, as well as movie theaters still recovering the standard numbers from the previous decade contributed to its under-performance. This is the second Toy Story spin-off after Buzz Lightyear of Star Command. This is the first Pixar film of the 2020s to be produced in a 2:39:1 aspect ratio (for non-IMAX theaters), since Soul, unlike Luca and Turning Red, which were produced in the 1.85:1 aspect ratio. In addition, for the IMAX version, there are nearly 30 minutes of scenes that were produced in the nearly IMAX standard ratio, which is the 1.43:1 aspect ratio, making the film the first Pixar film to have selected scenes to be produced in this ratio. This is the first Pixar film to be released theatrically since Onward, as Soul, Luca, and Turning Red were released on Disney+ instead of being released theatrically as planned due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As such, this is also the first Pixar film to be released in 3D since Onward. This is Pixar's first spin-off film. The second Pixar film to be released on June 17, after Finding Dory. This is the second Disney animated spin-off to be produced in a 2:39:1 aspect ratio after Planes: Fire & Rescue, and the first to include a 1.43:1 aspect ratio in IMAX theaters. The film is rated PG by the MPA, unlike the main films of the Toy Story franchise which were rated G. However, due to the brief same-sex kiss, it became the first children's animated feature film to be given an NC16 rating in Singapore, equivalent to an R rating in the US. Contrary to people's expectations, this is not the first time Buzz is played by an actor other than Tim Allen. The list includes: Pat Fraley (Toy Story Treats, video games, attractions) Patrick Warburton (Buzz Lightyear of Star Command) Javier Fernandez-Peña (Spanish mode in Toy Story 3) Mike MacRae (video games) Corey Burton (Disney on Ice) When the movie was announced, many people were thrown into great confusion over it. This can be largely attributed to the human character and the toy sharing the same name, which led many people to believe the human Lightyear's voice actor, Chris Evans, would replace the toy Lightyear's voice actor, Tim Allen, to become the new voice of the character. Disney later clarified on Twitter that this was not the case, with Evans being the voice of the in-universe character that inspired the toy, and Allen being the voice of the toy.[9]
Do this?! “Infinity awaits.” ―Tagline Lightyear is an American computer-animated science-fiction action film co-produced by Pixar Animation Studios and Walt Disney Pictures. It is a spin-off of the Toy Story franchise, serving as an origin story for the fictional test pilot/astronaut whom the Buzz Lightyear toy featured in the main films was based on, presented as a film within a film that the characters in Toy Story would have watched. The film was a box-office bomb, grossing $225 million worldwide against a $200 million production budget. It received generally positive reviews from critics, praising its animation, voice acting, score and entertainment value but criticized its screenplay and tone. It is Pixar's 26th animated feature, and was theatrically released on June 17, 2022, in RealD 3D, Dolby Cinema, and IMAX. It is also the first Pixar film filmed in IMAX. The definitive origin story of Buzz Lightyear, the hero who inspired the toy, Lightyear follows the legendary Space Ranger after he is marooned on a hostile planet 4.2 million light-years from Earth alongside his commander and their crew. As Buzz tries to find a way back home through space and time, he is joined by a group of ambitious recruits and his charming robot companion cat, Sox. Complicating matters and threatening the mission is the arrival of Zurg, an imposing presence with an army of ruthless robots and a mysterious agenda.[1] “In 1995, a boy named Andy got a Buzz Lightyear toy for his birthday. It was from his favorite movie. This is that movie.” ―Opening text In the far future, a massive ship, dubbed the Turnip, carries a colony through hyperspace to an unknown destination. The ship makes a quick pitstop at a planet, named Tikana Prime, and Space Rangers Buzz Lightyear and Alisha Hawthorne traverse their newfound surroundings for any resources. Buzz is a dutiful ranger with a habit of doing things on his own and makes mission logs to help him focus. Alisha, his best friend, mocks him for this and has been with him since the early training days at the academy. She also brings along a recruit named Featheringhamsten, whom Buzz is indifferent to as he feels that he can do things without the aid of anyone. Shortly after meeting the rookie, the trio are attacked by living vines and large flying insects and rush back to the Turnip. Buzz takes control of the ship and hastily tries to maneuver it off the planet, despite Featheringhamsten and Alisha trying to offer their help to him and the low altitude that the ship has. He just barely manages to fly the Turnip off the ground but it hits a cliff, causing them to lose air and crashing back down on the planet. With the last of their crystallic fusion energy wasted, Buzz offers to have himself stripped of his rank, but Alisha perks him up and gives him a new mission to get them off the planet by using the planet's resources to make a new crystallic fuel source. One year later, the colony has developed a civilization with vines and bugs only being a minor problem. A new fuel source is created and set to be tested by Buzz himself. Their plan is for Buzz to use the fuel to fly off the planet, make a swing around the closest sun, and try to reach hyperspace before safely landing back on Tikana Prime. Buzz flies off to the sun and manages to loop around, but nearly damages the ship's engine, forcing him to eject the fuel and sling him back through the safety hoops. He successfully does so, but upon landing notices that Airman Diaz now has a beard, when he did not have one before. Diaz reveals that his trip, caused him to miss over four years on Tikana Prime. Buzz is reunited with Alisha, who is now his superior and brings him up to date on how his trip is affected by time and ask that he abandon the mission. Buzz additionally learns that in the intervening years, Alisha met a scientist named Kiko and is now engaged to her while the colony has chosen to build living quarters. Buzz is given his and is additionally given a small robotic cat named Sox who was designed to be his close companion, while also displaying useful technological devices within him. Buzz has a nightmare about his crash and decides to give Sox a mission to find a suitable formula for a fuel source. He meets up with Alisha and manages to convince her to let him go again until they find the right fuel to get off the planet. In the years that Buzz spends traveling into space and back, he witnesses Alisha's life flash before his eyes. Her pregnancy, her family life with Kiko, her son's graduation and marriage and her autumn years. Buzz eventually returns to find that Alisha had passed away, but left behind a message telling him to continue the fight while also revealing her granddaughter, Izzy, who aspires to be a Space Ranger. Alisha's office is now occupied by Commander Burnside who informs Buzz that the mission to get off the planet has been cancelled and that they will make do by building a laser shield; shocking Buzz. Buzz solemnly returns to his living quarters and learns that Sox managed to successfully find a suitable formula for the crystallic engine. However, soldiers, dubbed Zappers, arrive to decommission Sox and Buzz flees with him. Sox uses his ability to use a tranquilizer dart to get passed one Zapper, making Buzz realize that Sox was initially designed to keep him in line. Using the formula, they manage to create the perfect crystallic fusion, but the computer carrying the information gets destroyed and Buzz and Sox flee once again. They manage to get back onto a space ship and escape the Zappers with Buzz flying around the sun and successfully achieving hyperspace. Buzz returns to the planet, but finds that things have become much more barren. He is rescued by a cadet from a robot who teleports itself and Buzz's ship away. The cadet reveals herself to be a grown up Izzy Hawthorne. Buzz has traveled over twenty-two years into the future. Izzy reveals that the robot came from a giant mother ship floating above the surface of the planet, dubbed the Zurg Ship, after the fact that the robots can only say "Zurg". She further reveals that the robots are surrounding the colony who have placed up their laser shield and are trapped. In order to defeat the robots, they need to blow up the ship, which they can now due to Buzz being a pilot. Buzz, Sox, and Izzy reach the fort where the latter introduces the rest of the team; Darby Steel, Mo Morrison, and ERIC, a robot. With the plan set in motion, the group is suddenly attacked by a robot that blows up their ship and tries to carry Buzz away. At this point, it becomes apparent that each member is ill-equipped to handle any action or danger. Nevertheless, Buzz manages to disarm the robot and Mo, unintentionally puts it out of commission by tossing a harpoon at its head. Buzz learns that the group is actually Junior Patrol and are not even considered "Rookies". Mo came aboard thinking that he was attending a workout bootcamp and has always been a quitter, Darby is trying to shorten her sentence after having stolen a ship, while Izzy, who is well knowledgeable in her grandmother's life, lacks patience.
Do this? “The adventure takes off!” ―Tagline Toy Story is a 1995 American computer-animated adventure comedy film directed by John Lasseter, and features the voices of Tom Hanks and Tim Allen. The film was co-produced by Ralph Guggenheim and Bonnie Arnold and was distributed by Walt Disney Pictures. It was written by Joss Whedon, Andrew Stanton, Joel Cohen, and Alec Sokolow, and featured music by Randy Newman. It was the very first feature film released to use only computer-generated imagery and the first film released by Pixar Animation Studios. Toy Story follows a group of toys who come to life whenever humans are not present, focusing on Sheriff Woody, an old-fashioned pullstring toy cowboy (Hanks), and Buzz Lightyear, an astronaut action figure (Allen). Toy Story went on to earn more than $361 million worldwide. The film received critical acclaim, and holds a rare 100% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It was praised for the technical innovation of the 3D animation, screenplay, musical score, and vocal performances (particularly Hanks and Allen); it is considered by many to be one of the best animated films ever made. The film was followed by four sequels, Toy Story 2 (1999), Toy Story 3 (2010), Toy Story 4 (2019), and Toy Story 5 (TBA). Additionally, numerous animated shorts, theme park attractions, video games, and a television series have been released. It was selected into the National Film Registry as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" on its first year of eligibility. The film won several awards including 7 Annie Awards and a Special Achievement Academy Award for John Lasseter and received 3 Oscar nominations for Best Original Screenplay, Best Original Score, and Best Original Song for "You've Got a Friend in Me", losing to both Pocahontas and The Usual Suspects. The film begins with a young boy named Andy Davis playing with his toys; a Mr. Potato Head toy, Slinky Dog, a plastic T-Rex dinosaur toy named Rex, a porcelain sheep lady named Bo Peep, Bo Peep's sheep, and his favorite toy, Woody, a cowboy doll. He pretends Mr. Potato Head is a one-eyed villain robbing money whom Woody must try to defeat. He takes Woody into the living room and plays with him some few more, with a short interruption talking to his mother about his birthday party later that day and the upcoming move to a new house. After playing with Woody, Andy starts helping his mother by taking his baby sister, Molly, to her. While he's away, all of the toys come to life. The party makes all the toys extremely nervous, wondering if Andy will get a toy that will replace them. Woody sends the Green Army Men led by Sarge downstairs to spy on the party guest. At the end of the party, his mother pulls out a surprise gift from behind her, which turns out to be a Buzz Lightyear action figure in spaceship packaging. Andy and his friends run upstairs to open him and in his hurry, Andy knocks Woody off the bed. They quickly leave after Andy's mother calls Andy and his friends back downstairs, and the other toys welcome the newcomer. Buzz, however, doesn't seem to be aware that he is a piece of plastic, believing himself to be the actual Buzz Lightyear on a mission to save the universe from Evil Emperor Zurg. The other toys take to him immediately, impressed by his many features. Only Woody is unconvinced, showing jealousy towards Buzz, who might replace him as Andy's favorite toy. As time passes, Andy replaces many of his cowboy-themed room decorations with space ones, causing Woody's resentment to rise while Buzz attempts to fix his "damaged spaceship" (in reality, a piece of the packaging that had been torn). Sometime later, Mrs. Davis takes Andy and Molly on a trip to the space-themed Pizza Planet restaurant. Andy asks if he can bring any toys, and she agrees to let him take only one. Woody, knowing Andy will choose Buzz, plans to trap him in a gap behind Andy's desk by using RC so Andy won't find him and choose him instead. However, the plan goes badly wrong and instead Woody knocks him out the window by accident after RC misses its mark. When the other toys, especially Mr. Potato Head except for Rex, Slinky Dog, and Bo Peep had learned of Woody's actions, most of them think Woody tried to kill Buzz out of jealousy. They then try to attack him, but Woody is rescued when Andy, unable to find Buzz, takes Woody on the trip instead. At a stop at a Dinoco gas station to refuel the car, Woody (after pondering how he's going to convince the toys that the whole thing was an accident) finds that Buzz (who also thinks Woody tried to kill him) grabbed ahold of the family's minivan and is with them. After a conversation, they begin to fight, knocking each other out of the minivan, and are left behind when it drives away which leads to an argument with Woody becoming fed up with Buzz's delusion of being a real space ranger. While they go their separate ways at first Woody spots a Pizza Planet truck stopping for directions and while he almost goes he realizes that Buzz has to come as the other toys still hate him, so he convinces Buzz to hitch a lift on the Pizza Planet truck (saying it's a spaceship that will take him home in order to return to Andy who is at Pizza Planet. Buzz goes to the cockpit (backseat) as it is safer although Woody says they should go to the truck (the cargo). At first Woody thinks that is ridiculous but during the ride there are several sharp turns and a hill causing him to get hit by a toolbox. Woody finds Andy there, but Buzz, still thinking he's a real space ranger, climbs into a toy crane game, thinking that it's a spaceship that will take him to Emperor Zurg's location. Woody goes in after him, but they eventually are found by Sid Phillips, who lives next door to Andy and is known to torture and destroy toys just for fun. Left alone in Sid's room, Woody and Buzz come upon a group of mis-matched toys, the results of Sid's many "experiments". Woody and Buzz react in fear, thinking that the mismatched toys are cannibals. Meanwhile, at Andy's house, the toys continue to look for Buzz in the bushes. But when Andy and his mother come home, Andy notices that Woody's gone. The other toys wonder what has become of the two. Some are worried for both Buzz and Woody, while others express their hope that Woody has met a bad end. The next day, at Sid's house, Woody and Buzz, having been mistreated by Sid (Sid burned Woody's forehead with a magnifying glass), try to escape, only to run into Sid's crazy Bull Terrier, Scud. Eventually getting out of Sid's room, Buzz comes upon a TV where he sees a commercial for the Buzz Lightyear line of toys. Watching it and reading the "MADE IN TAIWAN" on the inside of his wrist communicator, he realizes that Woody was right about him: he was a toy this whole time, not a real space ranger. However, in denial (and one last desperate attempt to prove he's not a toy), he tries to fly out of a window by jumping off the guardrail of the stairs on the second floor, only to fall to the floor, losing his arm in the process. He is found by Sid's little sister, Hannah, who takes him to put him in her tea party. Woody finally finds Buzz in Hannah's room, dressed as "Mrs. Nesbit" and attending a tea party with a few of Hannah's dolls. While Woody formulates a plan of escape, Buzz is too depressed to care. When Woody throws a string of Christmas lights across the way to the toys in Andy's room and Mr. Potato Head refuses to let Woody return to Andy's room as he still believes that Woody got rid of Buzz after telling the other toys have they forgot of what he did to Buzz, Buzz refuses to back him up as he is depressed that he is a toy and only throws his detached arm at Woody instead; Woody tries to use Buzz's detached arm in a desperate attempt to convince Andy's toys that Buzz is with him, but he accidentally reveals Buzz's detached arm, they take it as evidence that Woody truly did murder Buzz and leave him in disgust with Mr. Potato Head telling Woody that he hopes Sid rips his voice box out. The Mutant Toys then return and swarm over Buzz, and, despite his attempts to repel them, Woody finds that they have repaired him and reconnected his arm back in place. However, before Woody can make friends with them, Sid returns with his new acquisition: a firework rocket. He decides to blow up Woody with it, but cannot find him as Woody hides in a milk crate. Sid then decides to blow up Buzz instead, but is stymied by rainfall. He unknowingly traps Woody in the crate by putting a heavy toolbox on, and plans to go ahead in the morning due to rain.
Eddie Valiant's initial 30 second stroll through Maroon Cartoon Studios, was so complex that it involved over 180 individual elements, that when assembled with the film pieces, created stacks 8 feet in height. When the Special Edition DVD was released, Robert Zemeckis stated in an interview for a newspaper that Bill Murray was his and producer Steven Spielberg's original choice for the role of Eddie Valiant but neither could get in contact with him in time. Bill Murray states in interviews that when he read the interview he was in a public place at the time but he still screamed his lungs out, because he would have definitely accepted the role. The proposed route for Judge Doom's freeway is the same one the 10 Freeway follows through Los Angeles. Judge Doom's master plan to dismantle the Red Car trolley is based in fact. Private corporations conspired to eliminate public transit in the late 1940s and 1950s in order to generate demand for automobiles and ancillary industries to keep said automobiles running. Lena Hyena, the hideously ugly Jessica Rabbit impostor that Eddie meets in Toontown, is based on the creation of the same name by artist Basil Wolverton. She was first conceived in 1946 for a contest to depict "the world's ugliest woman". She is also inspired by Red's Grandma character from the 1943 Tex Avery short Red Hot Riding Hood. Joel Silver's cameo as Raoul J. Raoul was a prank on Disney chief Michael Eisner by Robert Zemeckis and Steven Spielberg. Eisner and Silver hated each other from their days at Paramount Pictures in the early '80s, particularly after the difficulties involved in making 48 Hrs. (1982). Silver shaved off his beard, paid his own expenses, and kept his name out of all initial cast sheets. When Eisner was told, after the movie was complete, who was playing the director - Silver was nearly unrecognizable - he reportedly shrugged and said, "He was pretty good." Screenwriters' Jeffry Price' and Peter S. Seaman first adapted the Gary K. Wolf novel, 'Who Censored Roger Rabbit?', in 1981, with a view to making it with up-and-coming director Robert Zemeckis. However, when Disney viewed Zemeckis' two feature films (I Wanna Hold Your Hand and Used Cars), they felt that Zemeckis wasn't talented enough to pull off the movie. After Zemeckis made Romancing the Stone and Back to the Future, Disney reconsidered and the movie was green-lit. At the movie theater where Eddie tells Roger his backstory, the short Goofy Gymnastics (1949) is being played, which didn't come out for another two years from the period the film is set in (1947). Crew members claimed to have chosen this particular short, despite its inaccuracy, because it was the zaniest short they could find in the Disney Vault. Initially, there were to be seven weasels (Greasy, Sleazy, Wheezy, Smartass, Psycho, Stupid, and Slimy) to parody the seven dwarfs. The three ingredients of the dip which 'kills' toons, (turpentine, benzene, and acetate) are all paint thinners which are used to remove animation from cells. This same concept is used in the Epic Mickey series. 326 animators worked full-time on the film. In total, 82,080 frames of animation were drawn. Including storyboards and concept art, animation director Richard Williams estimates that well over one million drawings were done for the movie. To convince the Disney and Amblin executives that they could make the movie, the filmmakers shot a short test involving Roger bumping into some crates in an alley and then getting picked up by an actor (this test can be seen in the Behind the Ears: The True Story of Roger Rabbit (2003) (V) documentary on the Vista Series DVD). After viewing the test, several of the Disney executives were convinced they had seen a traditional 'man-in-a-suit' gag with added animation. They couldn't believe it when they were told that it was 100% animation. Every frame of the movie which featured a mixture of animation and live action had to be printed up as a still photograph. An animator would then draw the particular illustration for that frame on tracing paper set on top of the photo. The outline drawing then had to be hand-colored. Once that was done, the drawing had to be composited back into the original frame using an optical printer. Stupid Weasel, the one in the striped shirt and the beanie hat with propellers, is the only weasel with a bellybutton. Disney's Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, Sleeping Beauty, The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad and Mary Poppins' characters didn't exist yet back in 1947, the year the movie was set in and yet some of those characters were visible in the 1988 movie. However, said movies were in production in the 1940s, which is possibly the reason for their inclusion. Also, Looney Tunes character Marvin the Martian made a cameo in the final scene, but he didn't debut until 1948; a year after this movie takes place. Other characters such as Tom & Jerry, Popeye, Little Lulu, Mighty Mouse and other deleted characters were originally intended to appear in the deleted "Acme's Funeral" scene. Also, Looney Tunes characters Pepé Le Pew and Tasmanian Devil (Taz) were planned to appear as cameos in the film, but they were dropped for reasons yet unknown. Some of the directors/producers were thinking about making a sequel or prequel to the film called Who Discovered Roger Rabbit or Roger Rabbit: World Road Trip. This film is often said to be the inspiration for the 2012 movie Wreck-It Ralph due to both featuring cameos of many famous characters, though Wreck-It Ralph has cameos by video game characters. The Muppet Movie features a similar crossover of characters during its "Rainbow Connection" finale, among which range from the characters of Sesame Street and The Muppet Show, Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas, and The Land of Gorch. When you see Eddie walking into the bar for the first time that's near his office, look at the American Flag behind the bar. It has 50 stars. The movie is based in 1947, but the last two of the 50 states, Alaska and Hawaii, didn't become states until 1959 (12 years later). Wheezy, the Toon Patrol weasel who smokes, is voiced by June Foray, who also voiced some female Looney Tunes characters. This makes Wheezy the only weasel to be voiced by a woman. "2011 Disneyana Fan Club Convention Highlight: Voice Panel" (Video). TH-cam. Retrieved on April 16, 2013. uproxx.com/movies/harrison-ford-lost-roles/4/ www.huffingtonpost.com/john-farr/bill-murray-and-the-roles_b_5850434.html Evans, Bradford (7 April 2011). "The Lost Roles of Eddie Murphy". Splitsider. Retrieved on 18 July 2015. mentalfloss.com/article/62910/15-things-you-might-not-know-about-who-framed-roger-rabbit www.buzzfeed.com/briangalindo/20-things-you-didnt-know-about-who-framed-roger-rabbit?.jlW64JPbRV#.yoYxe2OLKV mentalfloss.com/article/62910/15-things-you-might-not-know-about-who-framed-roger-rabbit mentalfloss.com/article/62910/15-things-you-might-not-know-about-who-framed-roger-rabbit www.itv.com/news/update/2012-08-08/bob-hoskins-retires-from-acting/ www.dvdizzy.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=30567 [1] WikipediaListLink Who Framed Roger Rabbit at Wikipedia Who Framed Roger Rabbit on Transcripts Wiki Do this?!
In 2016, the film was inducted into the National Film Registry, being deemed as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." A prequel entitled Roger Rabbit II: The Toon Platoon was planned in 1989. Set in 1941, the script had Roger expose the manager of the radio station that Jessica works at as a Nazi spy. However, having made Schindler's List, Spielberg rejected making a film with cartoonish Nazis in it. Who Discovered Roger Rabbit was being written in 1994 by Sherri Stoner and Deanna Oliver, which focused on Roger looking for his mother during the Great Depression. Alan Menken volunteered to serve as executive producer and wrote five songs for what was conceived as a parody of classic Hollywood musicals. (One of the songs, "This Only Happens In The Movies", was recorded in 2008 on the debut album of Broadway actress Kerry Butler). Walt Disney Pictures was planning to create the cartoon characters with computer animation. Michael Eisner pulled the project in 1999 when the budget rose to over $100 million, believing a prequel to a film made twelve years before would not be successful. In December 2007, Frank Marshall told MTV that he was willing to revive development of the film. In 2011, Bob Hoskins said he would not return to play Eddie Valiant (now an old man), but he later changed his mind. However, in 2012, he retired from acting due to his long battle with Parkinson's disease and unfortunately died from those complications in 2014.[9] Frank Marshall, executive producer of the film, has said that the film will be a prequel and the writing was almost complete. During an interview at the premiere of Flight, Zemeckis stated that the sequel is still possible, despite Hoskins' retirement in 2012 and the script for the sequel was sent to Disney for approval from studio executives. In February 2013, Gary K. Wolf, the creator of Roger Rabbit, announced that he as well as Erik Von Wodtke were working on a development proposal for an animated Disney buddy comedy starring Mickey Mouse and Roger Rabbit called "The Stooge", based on the 1952 film of the same name. The proposed film is set to be a prequel taking place 5 years before Who Framed Roger Rabbit and part of the story is about how Roger met Jessica, his future wife. Gary K. Wolf has stated that the film is currently wending its way through Disney. Unfortunately, following Hoskins' passing of pneumonia in April 2014, the sequel was shelved once more.[10] The success of Who Framed Roger Rabbit led to a moderate degree of merchandising for the film. In October 1989, McDonald's made a Halloween themed certificate offer for a free VHS copy of the film as well as a Roger Rabbit doll. Other memorabilia included cookie jars, Christmas ornaments, music boxes, snow globes, pin-back buttons, three video games, and a novelization of the film. While much of the merchandise was produced throughout the 1988-1989 promotion of the film, other items would later be offered as commemorative collectibles in celebration of Disney-related anniversaries. In 1989, Marvel commissioned a special graphic novel as a novelization in comic-book form. The novel featured several ideas for the plot scrapped from the original film, such as Roger and Eddie actually making a getaway in Dooms' squad car (until the engine blows up after Roger constantly hammers the pedals), as well as the deleted Pighead sequence featured on the Laserdisc version of the DVD releases (as well as on its first broadcast on CBS). Today, these graphic novels are collectors' items due to their rarity. A follow-up graphic novel titled Roger Rabbit: The Resurrection of Doom was also published, which was later continued by Disney Comics with their own Roger Rabbit comic-book series, which lasted 18 issues. This is the first Disney's live-action/animated hybrid film to be rated PG by the MPAA. Terry Gilliam was initially offered the job of directing this movie, but turned it down because he considered it "conceptually inauthentic to use the Looney Tunes genre/character stable as a springboard for a variation on the Howard the Duck story". One of the things that makes Who Framed Roger Rabbit special is that it had non-Disney cartoon characters appear in a Disney film. Producer Steven Spielberg had negotiated deals with Warner Bros., Fleischer Studios, King Features Syndicate, Felix the Cat Productions, Turner Entertainment, and Universal Pictures/Walter Lantz Productions. However, not every famous cartoon character made it into the final film. Notably left out were Popeye, Bluto, Olive Oyl, Tom and Jerry, Casper the Friendly Ghost, Scooby-Doo, Pink Panther, Baby Huey, Heckle and Jeckle, Winnie the Pooh, Little Lulu, and the Terrytoons. All of them would have appeared in a sequence set at Marvin Acme's funeral, but the scene was cut out for pacing concerns. These characters would have also been revealed to live in Toontown too. Benny the Cab drives across a bridge while being pursued by the Weasels. The bridge is the "Hyperion Bridge," which crosses a freeway near the old Disney Studio down in Hollywood; the one they had before they built the one in Burbank (around 1939). Russi Taylor recorded dialogue for Minnie Mouse in the film, but her lines were removed from the film. Bob Hoskins watched his young daughter learn how to act with imaginary characters. He later said he had problems with hallucinations after working on the film for so long. Hoskins' son was reportedly furious that his father hadn't brought any of his cartoon co-stars home to meet him, innocently believing they were real like how the movie depicts them as. A few frames of Eddie Valiant in the taxi are actually drawings of Eddie Valiant instead of the real Bob Hoskins. This was done because the spinning and jostling around were deemed too dangerous to put a real actor like Hoskins through. Bob Hoskins and Charles Fleischer later did both voices for Boris Goosninov in Universal Studios' Balto film trilogy; Hoskins did his voice in the first film, while Fleischer did the voice in the two sequels. Another scene that came about by accident was when Roger and Eddie Valiant arrive at Maroon Studios to interrogate Mr. Maroon. As Bob Hoskins delivered his lines, he looked straight ahead, instead of down at a three-foot rabbit. The animators decided to have Roger stand on tiptoe against the wall to cover up the gaffe. During filming, Charles Fleischer delivered Roger Rabbit's lines off camera in full Roger costume including rabbit ears, yellow gloves, and orange coveralls. During breaks when he was in costume, other staff at the studios would see him and make comments about the poor caliber of the effects in the "rabbit movie". Bob Hoskins even thought Charles was out of his mind at first, but went along with it anyway. Exteriors of the Maroon Cartoon studios were shot at Ren-Mar Studios in Hollywood, California. Judge Doom picks up a record and reads its label: "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down". Then he says, "quite a loony selection for a bunch of drunken reprobates." The song "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" is the familiar theme song for the Looney Tunes cartoons. Visual effects supervisor Ken Ralston donned the Judge Doom costume for the scene where Eddie Valiant shoots cartoon bullets at Doom in Toontown, as Doom runs away from Valiant. The song "Smile, Darn Ya, Smile," which the Toons sing when Eddie Valiant first arrives in Toontown and near the end of the movie, is featured in an eponymous 1931 Warner Brothers Merrie Melodie Smile Darn Ya Smile (1931), starring foxes Foxy and Roxy. Some versions of the movie include an extra scene (called the "Pig Head Sequence"): As punishment for intervening with Judge Doom's plan, Eddie Valiant is driven into Toontown, ambushed by the weasels during the night, and has a large pig's head "tooned" onto his. He runs home screaming and washes it off in the shower, presumably with a Dip-like substance. during which Jessica walked into his apartment. Zemeckis stated that despite not wanting to do it since it was the first completed scene for the film, he had to remove it because it slowed the movie down. The scene was cut from the original theatrical release and most home media prints, but did appear in theatrical trailers, LaserDisc releases, and its premiere television broadcast on CBS, as well as being a bonus feature on most DVDs. A scene cut from the theatrical version where Jessica rolls up her dress to reveal her stockings as she sits cross-legged is also included in this sequence.
Who Framed Roger Rabbit is widely considered one of the best movies of 1988. It is also seen as a landmark film that sparked the most recent era in American animation. The field of animation had suffered a recession during the 1970s and 1980s, to the point where even giants in the field such as The Walt Disney Company were considering giving up on major animated productions. This expensive film (production cost of $70 million - a staggering amount for the time) was a major risk for the company, but one that paid off handsomely. It inspired other studios to dive back into the field of animation; it also made animation acceptable with the movie-going public. After Roger Rabbit, interest in the history of animation exploded, and such legends in the field as Tex Avery, Bob Clampett, Friz Freleng, Chuck Jones, Bill Hanna, Joe Barbera, Walter Lantz, Max Fleischer, Stephen Hillenburg, and Ralph Bakshi were seen in a new light and received credit and acclaim from audiences worldwide. It also provided the impetus for Disney and Warner Brothers' later animated television shows. Roger Rabbit also was known for its numerous "spin-off" television series which include: Bonkers (1993-1995), Animaniacs (1993-1998), Freakazoid! (1995-1997) and Tiny Toon Adventures (1990-1995). The Disney Afternoon character Bonkers D. Bobcat from Bonkers and Raw Toonage was created because Amblin Entertainment, co-owner of all of the characters created for "Roger Rabbit" film, refused to allow Disney to produce a TV series incorporating characters from the film. Because of this, the main characters from the film were also not allowed in the television series that even Amblin itself made and distributed. Disney also, later on, produced the MMORPG Toontown Online, which was originally going to include the main characters from the film as well. But due to the suing issue with the author of the original novel, Gary Wolf, that year, the characters were kicked out of the final version. The film featured the last major voice role for two legendary cartoon voice artists: Mel Blanc (voicing Daffy Duck, Bugs Bunny, Tweety Bird, and also Sylvester in a one-line cameo) and Mae Questel (voicing Betty Boop, but not Olive Oyl, who did not appear in the final version of the film). Blanc (who would shortly thereafter pass away at the age of 81) did not do Yosemite Sam in the movie, done instead by Joe Alaskey. (Blanc had admitted that in his later years, he was no longer able to do the "yelling" voices such as which were very rough on his vocal cords in old age. There was a Foghorn Leghorn scene recorded, but cut, which also utilized Alaskey for the same reason.) Blanc also does Porky Pig, who gets the last line of the film, dressed as a police officer. The film was also the next-to-last screen appearance for veteran actors Alan Tilvern, who portrays R.K. Maroon in the film, and Stubby Kaye, who plays Marvin Acme. Tilvern appeared in only one other production before his retirement, the 1993 television version of Porgy and Bess, in which he played the non-singing role of the Detective. Alan Tilvern died in 2003. Stubby Kaye, best known for playing Nicely Nicely Johnson in the original stage and screen versions of Guys and Dolls, died in 1997. Despite being produced by Disney (in association with Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment), Roger Rabbit also marked the first time that characters from several animation studios appeared in one film. Studios that provided characters included: Universal/Walter Lantz Studios Fleischer Studios (characters now largely owned by Republic Pictures) Metro Goldwyn Mayer/United Artists (though the characters have been owned separately by Turner Entertainment since 1986) Hanna-Barbera ( though the characters from said studio were cut. ) Warner Bros. Terrytoons/20th Century Fox (characters now largely owned by CBS since the 1960s, and Paramount Pictures since 1997) This allowed the first-ever meetings between Bugs Bunny and Mickey Mouse. A contract was signed between Disney and Warner stating that their respective icons, Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny, would each receive exactly the same amount of screen time (they also had the same number of lines). This is why the script has Bugs, Mickey, and Eddie together in one scene falling from a skyscraper. (However, Bugs Bunny can be seen for a second in the studio lot near the beginning of the film, and Mickey has a second of free time before Bugs arrives.) Also, the speakeasy scene features the first and so far the only meeting of Daffy Duck and Donald Duck performing a unique dueling piano act which ends in a draw. Finally, the unique pairing is given a final send-off at the end of the film when Porky Pig faces the audience and says the traditional Warner Brothers animation closing line, "That's All, Folks!" just before Tinker Bell appears to tap the scene in the traditional Disney ending manner. Eventually, several additional animated shorts featuring Roger Rabbit, Jessica Rabbit, Baby Herman, and Droopy would be released. In 1991, the Disney Imagineers began to develop a new land for the Disneyland theme park in Anaheim, California, completely based on the Toontown of Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Mickey's Toontown opened in 1993 and spawned "Toontown" (without the Mickey's prefix) at Tokyo Disneyland in Japan. The Californian and Japanese Toontowns featured a ride based on Roger Rabbit's adventures, called Roger Rabbit's Car Toon Spin.
However, Richard Corliss, writing for Time magazine, gave a mixed review. "The opening cartoon works just fine but too fine. The opening scene upstages the movie that emerges from it," he said. Corliss was mainly annoyed by the homages towards the Golden Age of American animation, despite the film being set in that era. Today, 43 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes indicated 97% of reviewers enjoyed the film, earning an average score of 8.1/10. The consensus reads: "Who Framed Roger Rabbit is an innovative and entertaining film that features a groundbreaking mix of live action and animation, with a touching and original story to boot." Who Framed Roger Rabbit won Academy Awards for Sound Editing, Visual Effects, and Film Editing. Nominations included Art Direction, Cinematography, and Sound. Richard Williams received a Special Achievement Award "for animation direction and creation of the cartoon characters". Roger Rabbit won the Saturn Award for Best Fantasy Film, as well as Best Direction for Zemeckis and Special Visual Effects. Bob Hoskins, Christopher Lloyd, and Joanna Cassidy were nominated for their performances, while Alan Silvestri and the screenwriters received nominations. The film was nominated for four categories at the 42nd British Academy Film Awards and won awards for its visual effects. Roger Rabbit was nominated the Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture (Musical or Comedy), while Hoskins was nominated for his performance. The film also won the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation. The film first premiered on television on The Disney Channel on June 1, 1990. It made its network television debut on CBS as part of The Wonderful World of Disney on November 12, 1991. The film was rated PG by the Motion Picture Association of America for cartoon violence, adult content, drinking/smoking, and mild language. It would've been rated PG-13 due to the adult content, having been released in the late 80s. The film received a TV-G rating on both Disney Channel and Disney XD, with occasional TV-Y7 ratings, while it received a TV-PG-DLSV rating on Cartoon Network, The Hub, and Discovery Family. It also received a TV-14 rating on ABC Family (now Freeform). Several Easter eggs were hidden in the film by its animators. Tape-based analog video such as VHS did not reveal these, but technologies with better image quality, such as the analog laserdisc, were said to reveal the phone number of then-Disney CEO Michael Eisner. Also, when Benny the Cab wrecks at night and Eddie and Jessica roll out, there are two separate frames (2170-2172 on side 4 of the CAV laserdisc version), within two seconds of each other, showing a blurry shot of what seems to be her with no underwear. Disney recalled the laserdisc and issued another disc, later claiming that it was an incorrectly painted cell. Disney also stated that the cell in question could be seen on the new disc and on the VHS version. Two DVD versions edit the scene where Jessica Rabbit rolls out of the cab after Benny the Cab crashes. The 1999 DVD version, which was based off a later laserdisc release, reanimated the scene so that Jessica is wearing white underwear underneath her dress. When the DVD set was reissued in 2002, the scene was reanimated so that a piece of Jessica's skirt strategically covers Jessica as she rolls down the hill. A brief scene consisting of the toon Baby Herman passing by a female (human) extra on the set of the opening cartoon and sticking his middle finger up her dress, and then coming back from under the dress with a drool of spit on his lip. This was edited out of the DVD editions of the movie, though it can be found on editions of the VHS and laserdisc issues. In the piano duel scene with Donald Duck and Daffy Duck, when Donald Duck wins the duel, Daffy says "I've worked with a lot of wise-quackers, but you are despicable!" and, according to some, Donald replies, in his kazoo-like voice, "g--d--- stupid n-----..." Snopes, a noted debunking website, debunks this with the closed-captioning and Cartoon Network airings which records Donald as saying "Goddurn stubborn nitwit," though Snopes actually believes he's saying something akin to his typical exclamation, "Doggone stubborn little...That did it...waaa-aaaghghgh!" as is heard in many old Disney cartoons. The Vista Series DVD release uses the latter quote in its closed-captioning. However, the 1989 VHS and the 1999 DVD has Donald's insults captioned as "Doggone stubborn nitwit...That did it...Quack!" In the sequence where Bob Hoskins is seen falling an incredibly long distance flanked by Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny, shockingly Mickey and Bugs are best friends. Gary Wolf (author of the original novel) corresponded with many fans of the film through written letters and the Internet, compiling an exhaustive listing of the many hidden "Easter eggs" in the film and in the later Roger Rabbit short films. Wolf also sued Disney in 2001 for unpaid earnings related to the film.
Bro thats my Local McDonalds
25:19 I had to go back. The graffiti is 2 stories high. Did the taggers use a scaffolding? Holy fuck, LA is a mess.
Okay from North Hollywood to Universal city walk
It is true!!!
I means what's up with the traffic though?
Hi there, GoPro I don't like the afternoon rush hour because it is bad
16:50 😍😍😍😍
Dope video 👍
Why did you ate mcdonald's at the Begening of the video?
He Probably Did😅
What bus model is it?
Gilling.
LA 🚇 METRO 🚌 BUS 16 DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES 😊😊😊😊
Could you go to Santa Monica on the E line tomorrow
Nice video thanks for sharing
Great video
Great video bud
I love your channel
Nice
🙄🤯
Im surprised the station isn't partially or fully enclosed or have some sort of hearing protection for passengers there. I know that would be expensive but damn losing your hearing is pretty expensive too
This is the cleanest street level entrance... I've seen for public trains in a while 🙂
the sidewalks man!!
the filming is great... are you using a wide angle lens?
Really nice subtitles😊
Nice video
Thats a full ride
Avalon Station to West Hollywood Please
12:17
First comment