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It has appeared in several Disney films and almost every Pixar movie. [ 1 ] Brad Bird first used it for a license plate number in the " Family Dog " episode of Amazing Stories : "I put it into every single one of my films, including my Simpsons episodes—it's sort of my version of caricaturist Al Hirschfeld 's ' Nina '."
Toy Story. A book named after the short is on Andy's bookshelf: the author is Lasseter. [34] Toy Story 2. Billy can be seen several times briefly on one of the channels on Andy's TV when Hamm is quickly flipping through the channels. [6] Toy Story 3. The same toys are cowering beneath a counter as Rex approaches the door. [5] [86] [96]
Gudetama is portrayed as a yellow yolk of a raw egg with prominent buttocks. [14] It has a head with no neck and a body with limbs, but no fingers or toes. Its eyes are drawn like two ovals, appearing lazy. It has a mouth with a tongue but no obvious teeth. Often depicted laying on an egg white as a bed, while also using bacon as a blanket.
Donald chops down a pine tree, to set as his Christmas tree. Chip and Dale follow him to his house, and steal Donald's nut supply, with the use of his toys. Donald sets to protect it all, tricking them with a Father Christmas guise trap drawing a pistol at them. Donald and the chipmunks engage in a toy gun war until Donald gets blown with a ...
The first clue you might get that something is going is when you get to know Asha's seven best friends.. Safi has allergies, and the first thing he does is get his germs all over a freshly baked ...
The team used 86 3D scans to create a model for an "average" set of teeth, and wrote an algorithm that adapts that model based on what it sees in the contours of teeth in photos and videos. Disney ...
Don't Look Under the Bed premiered on Disney Channel on October 9, 1999. [2] [4] It was the second DCOM to receive a TV-PG rating, due to its scary scenes. [3] According to Johnson, "There were a number of meetings where we'd talked about the tone and what [Disney] wanted it to be — scary but not too scary. That's the bar we kept trying to find.
Asha's characterisation was the subject of discussion amongst critics. Lee Lamarche of MovieWeb opined that she conforms to Disney Princess tropes, being a girl who fights against a powerful antagonist and has a cute sidekick, but felt that the film suffers from Disney Princess fatigue. [25] B. J.