Later, Disney made the risqué task to getting hand-drawn features back in theaters with 2009s Princess and the Frog, but except the fact it features a "black" princess, a first for the entire studio, it was simply a very forgettable film; with some of the worst kinds of animations ever done, such as the frog male doing a rather jarring 'Tude face. Is that was a thing then, too?
The real last studio's animated feature entirely made on hand-drawn before to simply closed the shop for more CGIs was 2011s Winnie the Pooh. Like a final farewell to nearly one century of magic and timeless stories that soon, will turn the whole structure of the corporation at awkward by telling things for a very internet-horny and masochist audience. I am not one of them anymore.
But since over a year, this goal has changed by thrown away the original blog's plan, and where my own time is been more limited than before, the decision is to finally cancelled the remaining reviews and critiques of the animated series, which I own a passion to it back two decades ago, by let telling me at that time that newer animated productions don't always sucks if the heart is in the right place.
That sounds like the classic animation snubs from the forum I joined in the past before to completely shutdown for Facebook. Now, this is rather pointless to launch an elite about the animation pionneers, which makes the first "official" Home Video collection of the 1920s Paul Terry's Aesop's Fables at unbelievable, that animation historian and film archivist Thad Komorowski has investing all his bucks to given it an official Home Video release-- To think that over a quarter-century ago, he was likely a rotten 'toon nerd! (Sorry, Thad! I know you hate me for my awkward english, but I admire everything you have done for given to American animation from the old era a much accurate look as seen from original filmprint than what were done by big studios in years.)
In production order, we've given the reviews of every segments from Mr. Whiskers' First Friend (1-1) to the lone half-hour adventure On Whiskers, On Lola, On Cheryl and Meryl (1-31); plus Whiskers the Great (1-33), Radio Free Bunny (1-35) which it beginning this journey, the rather excecrable Freaky Tuesday (1-40) and the series' finale Rip Van Whiskers (2-18) at a April Fool's post, by claimed all the more seriously that the John McIntyre's season 2 segments are not worth to own a critique if everything what made the setup of the series so special first is been destroyed by an urban jungle filled by what may looked like if those out-of-nowhere 1940s Screen Gems shorts will own a legit reboot.
But this blog is far to finish. There's more that will come soon... Such amazing for someone who cannot standing to operate a blog over than a few months.
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