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Thursday, 30 June 2011

Dragon-Ball-Z-Tournament-game

<a href="http://www.cartoongamesforkids.com/playonline106-Dragon-Ball-Z-Tournament-game.html" title="Dragon Ball Z Tournament"><center><img src="http://www.cartoongamesforkids.com/files/image/dragonballztournament.jpg" width="180" height="135" border="0" alt="Dragon Ball Z Tournament"><br/>Dragon Ball Z Tournament</center></a>
Dragon Ball Z Tournament

The Most Popular Cartoon Videos



  • Alice In Wonderland  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Cinderella  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • It's The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown  (Lee Mendelson-Bill Melendez Productions...)


  • Anastasia  (20th Century Fox, Fox Animation Studios)


  • The Lion King  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • I Love To Singa  (A Vitaphone Production)


  • Steamboat Willie  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • How The Grinch Stole Christmas!  (Chuck Jones Enterprises, Cat in the Hat Productions...)


  • Beauty And The Beast  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • What A Night For A Knight  (Hanna-Barbera Studios)


  • Peter Pan  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Robin Hood  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Yogi's First Christmas  (Hanna-Barbera Studios)


  • The Little Mermaid  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Rabbit Of Seville  (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc.)


  • Donald In Mathmagic Land  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Goldilocks And The Three Bears  (MGM)


  • Three Little Pigs  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • What's Opera, Doc?  (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc.)


  • Fantasia  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Heavy Metal Mater  (Pixar Animation Studios)


  • The Jungle Book  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Pinocchio  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Charlotte's Web  (Hanna-Barbera Productions...)


  • A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving  (Lee Mendelson-Bill Melendez Productions...)


  • Sleeping Beauty  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Feed The Kitty  (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc.)


  • The Bashful Buzzard  (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc.)


  • A Clue For Scooby Doo  (Hanna-Barbera Studios)


  • Barbie: A Fairy Secret  (Mattel)


  • The Tell-Tale Heart  (UPA Productions)


  • Frosty The Snowman  (Rankin-Bass Productions, Mushi Studio)


  • One Froggy Evening  (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc.)


  • The Big Red Chicken  (Nickelodeon)


  • Casey At The Bat  (Walt Disney Pictures)


  • Hercules  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Bugs Bunny Nips The Nips  (Leon Schlesinger Studios)


  • Aladdin  (Walt Disney Pictures.)


  • Plane Crazy  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Hassle In The Castle  (Hanna-Barbera Studios)


  • The Flintstone Flyer  (Hanna-Barbera Studios)


  • Who Framed Roger Rabbit  (Touchstone Pictures, Amblin Entertainment...)


  • A Goofy Movie  (Walt Disney Television Animation)


  • The Princess And The Frog  (Walt Disney Feature Animation...)


  • Song Of The South  (Walt Disney Studios)


  • Scooby-Doo On Zombie Island  (Hanna-Barbera Studios...)


  • Coal Black And De Sebben Dwarfs  (Leon Schlesinger Studios)


  • Peter And The Wolf  (Walt Disney Pictures)


  • The Hunchback Of Notre Dame  (Walt Disney Studios)



  • Top10 Cartoon Characters Modern and Classic Cartoon Characters



    10. Rocky and Bullwinkle

    Rocky and Bullwinkle with FlowersClassic Media
    Stan and Ollie. Hope and Crosby. Martin and Lewis. In the animated world, Rocky and Bullwinkle are the comedy team who saves the day. Rocky's unending optimism coupled with Bullwinkle's lucky mishaps save their pelts every time.

    9. Wile E. Coyote

    Wile E. CoyoteJustin Sullivan / Getty Images
    Poor Wile E. Coyote. We don't want him to catch the Road Runner, but we sure feel bad for him. His ACME contraptions never work properly. You've got to admire his tenacity!

    8. Popeye

    PopeyePricegrabber.com
    No one has ever done so much for spinach as Popeye. His bulging forearms, squinty eyes and staccato chuckle are recognized by many generations.

    7. The Grinch

    The GrinchCartoon Network
    Dr. Seuss created many book characters who made the leap to TV, but none as easily and successfully as The Grinch. Another holiday favorite, his turn from selfish to selfless promotes the true meaning of Christmas.

    6. Fred Flintstone

    The FlintstonesTurner Broadcasting
    Fred Flintstone is the forerunner to Homer Simpson and Peter Griffin. He was the first portly animated husband who had a hot wife, not enough brains for his schemes and a bad temper. Yet, he loved his family.

    5. Charlie Brown

    Charlie BrownPricegrabber.com
    Introduced on TV in It's Christmas, Charlie Brown, this comic strip staple became a holiday tradition. The kid who never kicks the football, whose dog is more popular than he is and who has a crush on the red-headed girl steals our hearts every year.

    4. Bart Simpson

    Bart Simpson©1999 20TH CENTURY FOX FILM CORP.
    The next favorite character from The Simpsons is Bart. We all knew a kid like Bart, and sometimes wished we were like him.

    3. Mickey Mouse

    Mickey MouseKevin Winter / Getty Images
    Mickey Mouse represents Disney in all its forms. He started life in black and white Steamboat Willie. Mickey Mouse isn't just a cartoon character; he's an icon.
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    2. Homer Simpson

    Homer SimpsonTwentieth Century Fox
    Homer Simpson is known throughout the world. Having been on TV for over 20 seasons, this patriarch is not the father who knows best, but he certainly tries.

    1. Bugs Bunny

    Bugs BunnyTurner Broadcasting
    "What's up, doc?" Bugs Bunny is, perhaps, the most recognizable and famous cartoon character. Looney Tunes were first created as lead-ins to feature films. It was only later the cartoons became a Saturday morning staple. Generations later, Bugs Bunny is still tops.

    Wednesday, 29 June 2011


    Tuesday, 28 June 2011

    top 4cartoons films in the world


    Before Brad Bird became one of the brain trust deities at Pixar, he made a little movie called The Iron Giant that served as his application for Most Crazy Talented Storywriter in the animated realm.

    Hogarth befriends an alien robot during a time when Sputnik sounded the first rounds of the Cold War, and Iron Giant tells their story with that political landscape in mind, padding it with tropes from 1950s Sci-Fi fare.

    As the boy teaches his 30-story E.T. to become more human, the government closes in on his new friend, and more than just comedy ensues. The Iron Giant is a walking doomsday machine, who becomes more human than those who would rather shoot him down than try to get to know him. That arc is a familiar one, tried and true long before Bird put his stamp on it. But it is Bird's take on the material, his balance between the scenes animated kids fare needs and what his story demands, that makes the movie stand out. The movie did not ignite the box office during its theatrical release, but it did get its due on DVD. Watch it. Twice.



    Woody and Buzz returned four years after the original Toy Storyand actually managed to top that masterpiece with their continued adventures. Here the gang has some time to themselves when their owner Andy heads off to summer camp, but they must soon contend with the ultimate fanboy, a man-child voiced by Wayne Knight (Newman from Seinfeld) who wants Woody for his collection of rare toys.

    The film amps up the technical magic of the actual computer animation, while also increasing the imagination factor, but it's the Pixar writers who once again prove to be the true heart of these films. Should Woody choose the pampered, petrified life Knight's character offers him? How could Buzz be one of countlessBuzzes? What's really important in life anyway? If Toy Story proved that computer animation could be art, Toy Story 2 established that the medium was here to stay.



    One of Pixar's very finest efforts to date is The Incredibles. By 2004, superhero movies had become big business, raking in hundreds of millions of dollars at a time.

    Unlike most, The Incredibles wasn't based on a preexisting comic book series. Even so, it captured everything that made those classic Silver Age superhero stories great. Like the Fantastic Four, the Incredibles are less a superhero team and more a slightly dysfunctional family of super-powered do-gooders.

    Yes, the movie packs in plenty of widescreen superhero action. The tropical island battle with Syndrome's robots plays out like the best Bond movie we've never seen, and the final clash between heroes and villain is an amazing sight to behold. But the movie never loses sight of the character drama and family focus. By the end, The Incredibles took their place alongside great superhero teams like the Avengers and the Justice League. And yet, only one among those three has a theatrical movie to call their own. Score one for the Parr family.



    At the heart of most Pixar films is the theme of isolation. WALL-E, the animation studio's crowning achievement, is a breathtaking meditation on loneliness and the re-enforcement that every sentient creature contains an unbeatable desire to connect with someone else.

    We were all told, from the teasers, that we were going to absolutely freakin' love this little robot bastard -- and we scoffed! Right. Sure we would. Just because he makes squeaky noises and looks a bit like Johnny 5 doesn't mean he's going to win our hearts, minds and a spot on our lunch pail. But guess who was all sorts of wrong? All of us!

    Because Pixar just has a way of creating fantastic creatures and characters who tug violently on all our heartstrings. And all WALL-E wanted to do was hold someone else's hand like he'd seen in the musical Hello, Dolly. Post-trashocalyptic world be damned!

    Oh, and the villain of the piece? Our heinously corrupted, yet inevitable, future as gluttonous consumers. Talk about a dark backdrop.






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    Monday, 27 June 2011

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