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In a little West African village, an unusual boy named Kirikou is born, who can speak before birth and walk immediately after birth. After Kirikou's mother tells him that an evil sorceress, Karaba, has dried up their spring and eaten all the men of the village except for one, he decides to accompany the last warrior, his uncle, to visit her and try to stop her.
Droners takes place on an ocean planet called TerrAqua, which is 95% covered by water, with the rest being archipelagos and atolls. It follows Corto, Enki, Mouse and Oro, a drone racing team known as the Tikis, from the island of Nuï, on a mission to save the future of their archipelago home, Terraqua, which is being threatened by marine submersion.
Little Nicholas (French: Le Petit Nicolas), also known as Petit Nicolas (UK), [3] is a 2009 French family comedy film directed by Laurent Tirard, who co-wrote with Grégoire Vigneron and Alain Chabat. [4]
The Rain Children (French: Les Enfants de la pluie) is a 2003 French and South Korean animated fantasy film directed by Philippe Leclerc. The plot is loosely inspired by Serge Brussolo 's novel A l'image du dragon .
Nicky Larson et le parfum de Cupidon was previewed over most of France on 15 December 2018, before its national release on 6 February 2019, the same in Switzerland. [ 3 ] 13 February 2019, the film was released in Belgium, [ 3 ] on 14 March 2019 in Thailand and on 23 May 2019 in Russia under the title Undercover Playboy . [ 3 ]
The first season consists of 13 episodes. The second and third seasons each consist of 8 episodes. The fourth and final season consists of 65 episodes. The series premiered on September 9, 1989 and ended on December 6, 1991. Shout! Factory released the entire series on DVD in region 1 on May 20, 2013. [2]
The series was quick to draw attention. A few years later Goscinny began to write Le Petit Nicolas in short story form, with illustrations by Sempé. The first Nicolas story, L’œuf de Pâques, was published 29 March 1959 in the journal Sud-Ouest Dimanche. The authors hadn't initially planned to continue the series but the sudden popularity ...
The Enchanted Journey is based on the book by Atsuo Saitō, [1] originally published in 1970. [3] The film was produced by Studio Furumi, [citation needed] and released in Japanese theaters on July 21, 1981. [1]