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Una película de huevos (A Spanish title meaning either A Movie about Eggs or "a movie about balls" [courage]) is a 2006 Mexican animated adventure comedy film produced by Huevocartoon Producciones and distributed by Videocine, and is the first feature film developed by the brand.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, animation in Mexico was restricted to short formats. Dibujos Animados S.A., also ran by Terrazas, created Cold War UPA-inspired anti-communist propaganda cartoons for the USIA with the intention of showing these films in Latin America [2] [3] (despite being unaware of the intent to do so) featuring "good guys" Manolin the rooster and Burrito the donkey and ...
La familia del Barrio (lit. transl. The Family from the Neighborhood ; figuratively "The del Barrio Family") is a Mexican adult animated sitcom television sitcom created by Teco Lebrija and Arturo Navarro and premiered on MTV Latin America on May 5, 2013.
Mi familia es un dibujo (My family is a cartoon) is an Argentine live-action/animated telenovela broadcast by Telefe from 1996 to 1998. It led to a spin-off in 1998, changing its name simply to Dibu (Draw), the name of the cartoon protagonist. Germán Kraus plays José "Pepe" Medina, the protagonist's father.
Most of the series broadcast by the cable television channel Disney Jr. (Latin America) are Disney Jr. Series as Mickey Mouse Clubhouse, Handy Manny, Jake and the Never Land Pirates, and Sofia the First.
La Familia Proud: 2001 2 The Emperor's New School: Las Nuevas Locuras del Emperador: 2006 2 Fish Hooks: Pecezuelos: September 5, 2010 3 Gravity Falls: Gravity Falls: un verano de misterios: October 6, 2012 2: Star vs. the Forces of Evil: Star vs. Las Fuerzas del Mal: September 12, 2015 4: Milo Murphy's Law: La Ley de Milo Murphy: January 4, 2017 2
Elisa Griensen was the daughter of Juan G. Gruñesen [1] and María Lucía Zambrano. [3] Griensen's father was of French origin, born in Alsace around 1828. He arrived in Mexico on an unknown date through the Tampico, although it is unknown whether he arrived before or after the Second French intervention in Mexico. [4]
La familia Trapisonda (The Brawl Family) is a Spanish comic series created by Francisco Ibáñez in 1958 for the magazine Pulgarcito about the comic misadventures of a low-middle-class family. Most strips of the series are one page long.