Remember the time me and a whole gang of talking trains managed to fit inside one family house and yet all the kids were startled by was their board game coming to life?
(Source: poohadventures.wikia.com)
Remember the time the giant chicken picked up Sideshow Bob and Plankton from SpongeBob?
(Source: poohadventures.wikia.com)
Remember the time me and my hundreds of friends joined a couple of underage spies as they defeated what just so happened to be Mike Judge?
(Source: poohadventures.wikia.com)
Remember the time I controlled a Jaeger with talking trains and magical equines inside?
(Source: poohadventures.wikia.com)
(Source: poohadventures.wikia.com)
No picture for this one. Just…just read the title.
I might have pointed this out before, but Hayao Miyazaki does not approve of anyone modifying his work.
These people think they’re so epic…
Seriously, it’s very hot over here and I can’t turn the fan on because I won’t hear what anyone’s saying!
I haven’t yet complained about how quiet the real movie footage is compared to the inserted footage. Sort out your THX sound settings, damn it!
I like the part at the beginning because bascially they’re trying to make Space Jam. Oh God, I just stated the obvious, didn’t I?
Who Framed Roger Rabbit is more than just a crossover to make us feel giddy seeing characters from seperate licenses join together. It’s one of the greatest technical/artistic achievements in cinema history. Trust me, I saw it at a special screening with The Thief and the Cobbler that coincidentally took place on my 21st birthday (I even had photos taken with Richard Williams himself).
Unfortunately, several people these days see it as just something that makes them excited just because it’s Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny together, so now seems like the perfect opportunity to recap one of the films that tried to cash in on the success of Roger Rabbit, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, the film that is at least better than Space Jam. But this is the Pooh’s Adventures version, so that automatically makes it worse.
The closest Back in Action could get to being a crossover were a smart take-that at the Scooby-Doo movies offered by Warner Bros. as a marketing gig and the Daleks among other classic sci-fi aliens. But thanks to the magic of Windows Movie Maker, we are treated to Winnie the Pooh, Pokemon (of freaking course), Mickey Mouse, the Madagascar penguins, numerous Disney sidekicks and the villains from Power Rangers. Hm, can’t be worse than the work of Yakko, can it? Well, let’s dig into this anyway. It feels great to be Pooh’s Adventures of Looney Tunes: Back in Action.
Goodness gracious, out of everyone in the audience Dick Williams could’ve shook hands with…