A trailer from late 2008 for Pooh’s Adventures of the whole Star Wars saga.
Pooh’s Adventures of The Little Mermaid 2: Return to the Sea: Part 8. A finale that isn’t as grand as the Duke.
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Overall: 4.2/5
0.16/10. Like I said earlier, putting Disney into Disney makes sense, more than adding Ghostbusters characters, SpongeBob, the villains of Rock-a-Doodle, Mewtwo and the blue fairy from Filmation’s Pinocchio, some of which were forgotten about for the majority of the video. We also happen to see more of the added villain than we do the added good guys, which is unfair even by Pooh’s Adventures standards. Plus, just they’re all cartoons, doesn’t mean they can actually survive underwater, or fit into a building like that for Stay Puft’s matter! But hey, at least the ratings given to part 1 were right - this really ain’t as bad as Pooh’s Adventures of Jeepers, It’s the Creeper.
“I… But Ariel!”
“I’m sorry, SpongeBob.”
Pooh’s Adventures of The Little Mermaid 2: Return to the Sea: Part 7: In Which Pooh Finally Talks!
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Pooh’s Adventures of The Little Mermaid 2: Return to the Sea: Part 6. The “heroes” finally spring into action. Also, the dreaded “running gag”.
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Pooh’s Adventures of The Little Mermaid 2: Return to the Sea: Part 5. Tip and Dash are cumming!
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Pooh’s Adventures of The Little Mermaid 2: Return to the Sea: Part 4. Back then, BowserMovies used his character clips a lot less than usual. That only made his videos worse.
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Pooh’s Adventures of Ghostbusters: Part 12, the credits. Find out how insane BowserMovies really is.
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So that’s the end of BowserMovies’ second ever Pooh’s Adventures video. And what did Pooh do?





Overall: 4.8/5
Similar to The Magic Voyage, this gets 0.04/10. It didn’t make me feel angry, it just left me sad. A lot of the people who enjoyed this have probably never seen the movie before. It makes sense when the person who created the video is below the age of, say, 14, but this came from a 22 year old man who was 19 when he made the video. Why did videos like this make Pooh’s Adventures so popular when Pooh hardly did anything? Lord knows. I mean, he only got to speak a few lines, and not as much as Rabbit.
A lot of the things the characters had to say were either "really” or a line someone in the movie was supposed to say, and this is especially a pain because it’s assuming the characters are that smart. Wouldn’t anyone be concerned if there were cartoon characters joining in with an exterminaition team, anyway? Whatever the reason, join me next time where I most likely riff on Pooh’s Adventures of The Little Mermaid II, because what’s a blog about the horrors of Pooh’s Adventures without the most viewed out of them all?
This video was suggested by Gregory Smith. Thanks for not being the only one to use your brain, Greg.
P.S. I find it quite ironic that another Ghostbusters butchery starring Ed, Edd 'n’ Eddy called “The Ed,edd N Eddy Advantures of Ghostbusters” had most of its parts blocked by Sony. Guess Ed, Edd 'n’ Eddy in Castilian crossed with Ghostbusters in English was a little too bad.
Pooh’s Adventures of Ghostbusters: Part 11, the second to last. And Pooh’s line about hugging only appeared in the trailer. Damn marketing.
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Pooh’s Adventures of Ghostbusters: Part 10. The action builds up, and so do the toons’ actions. Kind of.
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Pooh’s Adventures of Ghostbusters: Part 9. This part got 24 likes and 0 dislikes (until now). Why?
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Pooh’s Adventures of Ghostbusters: Part 8. Why does this part have more dislikes than the parts that barely gave the toons anything to do at all?
Pooh’s Adventures of Ghostbusters: Part 7. This is going to be one short commentary.
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