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Antz was released on VHS and DIVX on February 9, 1999, [40] [41] and on DVD on March 23, [41] [42] becoming the first feature-length CGI-animated film to be available on DVD. [43] The original release used a 35mm print of the film, rather than an encoded version from the original files. [44] [45] A special edition version was released on ...
DNA Productions was founded in 1987, by John A. Davis and Keith Alcorn, after they left their positions at K & H Productions, a Dallas-based animation company. [1] Davis and Alcorn started their new studio with a $5,000 loan. [2] [3] The company was based in the Dallas suburb of Irving. [4] The name "DNA" stood for "Davis N Alcorn".
Pacific Data Images's first feature film, Antz, was released by DreamWorks Pictures October 2, 1998. This was followed by Shrek May 18, 2001. After the success of Antz , Sega contacted the company to create a series of commercials for a marketing campaign for the launch of the Sega Dreamcast .
Ironically, he didn't stay off TV for long, coming back in The New Adventures of "Mighty Mouse and Heckie & Jeckle" from 1979 to 1980 and "Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures" from 1987 to 1988. IMDb ...
The kid likes the game because it's easy to control and play. My problem is this: Antz really wasn't a kids' movie -- it was a Woody Allen flick. Hey, maybe they should make a game based on Sleeper or, better yet, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask). Antz isn't terrible, but it won't bowl you over with ...
[1] 1995 September 5 Technology ESPN SportsZone streams a live radio broadcast of a baseball game between the Seattle Mariners and the New York Yankees to thousands of its subscribers worldwide using cutting-edge technology, using the RealAudio format, developed by a Seattle-based startup company named RealNetworks – the first livestreaming ...
The studio's first theatrical release Anastasia (1997) was a critical and box-office success (and was and still remains the most successful film by its director Don Bluth), but their second and final theatrical release Titan A.E. (2000) got mixed reviews and was a costly flop, losing $100 million for 20th Century Fox. [3]
The store opened at the site of Kim's dry-cleaning business, and eventually moved to its own location on Avenue A in 1987, which eventually closed in 2004. [3] [4]It expanded to five other locations, including Mondo Kim's at 6 St. Mark's Place in the East Village, Kim's Underground at 144 Bleecker Street on Laguardia Place, Kim's West at 350 Bleecker Street & West 10th Street, and Kim's ...