toothpaste advertisement featuring a gang of wacky stop motion puppets that revel in a plaque problem
1946-01-01
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5.3After hearing someone's "meow" for the first time in his life, baby puppy goes in search of the unknown beast and meets various inhabitants of the house and yard. On children's curiosity and the first acquaintance with the world.
6.8A figure known as "The Assassin" descends from the heavens into a nightmarish pit full of monsters, titans, and cruelty.
3.0A little slacker doesn't appreciate his childhood and wants to face with adult problems as quickly as possible.
0.0Kitty and Mimmy are twin kittens. They have been staying inside on a rainy day when they get a souvenir from their mother; an umbrella with different colors and rain boots. The two are excited to try them out, but the rain has stopped...
8.0A theatrical spinoff of the 'Thunderbolt Fantasy' television series which explores the backstory of Shā Wú Shēng, the Screaming Phoenix Killer, and bridges the events of the first and second seasons.
7.1Two cops portrayed by Michelin Men chase an armed Ronald McDonald through the streets of a fictionalized, stylized city.
7.6Animated characters introduce a compilation of George Pal replacement animation Puppetoon short films from the 1930s and 1940s.
Short Soviet puppet animation based on Gogol's novel Dead Souls.
9.0Christmas 2015 saw Judith Kerr's family favourite literary character, Mog, reimagined in her first-ever animated foray.
0.0A love story by PES. Announcing the new citizenM Hotel in Times Square, New York City.
6.0This brief animated film was designed to promote the remodelling of old clothing as part of the World War II effort.
0.0A particularly vicious Father Time with a hit-list in his Book of Doom seeks to wipe out characters brought to life from fabric patterns. This neat concept for a cartoon washing powder commercial can be credited to Alexander Mackendrick, who worked at the J Walter Thompson advertising agency before making films at Ealing and then Hollywood.
0.0Let's All Go to the Lobby (officially known as Technicolor Refreshment Trailer No. 1) is an American animated musical advertisement that was produced in the mid-1950s for Filmack Studios. It was played in theaters before the beginning of the main film or before intermission, and features animated food items urging the audience to buy snacks sold in the theater lobby. It was directed by Dave Fleischer with lyrics by Jack Tillar.
0.0Animated cinema advertisement produced for Horlick's by George Pal.
0.0Animated cinema advertisement produced for Horlick's by George Pal.
6.5A grand-mother replaces her old companion robot by a more recent one. But things won’t go as expected…
0.0An aloof junior high school boy meets a cheerful high school girl inside a Lotte shop where they both reach for the same chocolate bar. Before he can react, she takes a different candy instead and leaves with her purchase. Continuing to dwell on the missed connection, the boy hopes that he can meet the girl again and gift her the sweet she originally wanted—with the addition of his feelings.