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Treasure Planet is a 2002 American animated science fiction adventure film [2] produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and released by Walt Disney Pictures.It is a science fiction adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's adventure novel Treasure Island (1883), and it is the third retelling of the story in an outer space setting, following the Bulgarian film Treasure Planet (1982) and the ...
1 November 2002: Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones: 1 November 2002 * Originally released in May 2002. 22 minutes shorter than the 35mm version due to older IMAX equipment having platter size limits. Aspect ratio cropped to 1.81:1. [7] Closing credits changed to slide format due to platter size limits. [citation needed] Treasure Planet
Treasure Planet (An Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album to the 2002 animated science fiction adventure film Treasure Planet.The album features seventeen tracks – fifteen tracks from the score composed by James Newton Howard, and also featured two pop singles: "I'm Still Here" and "Always Know Where You Are".
A music video was created that featured a young man in front of changing scenery all the while Rzeznik is appearing alongside him. The young man and Rzeznik are seen running throughout the video towards Treasure Planet and away from the young man's arguing parents; Scroop, one of the villains from the movie, in silhouette; and the destruction of the planet.
McGoohan's last movie role was the voice of Billy Bones in the Disney animated film Treasure Planet (2002). That same year, he received a Prometheus Hall of Fame Award for The Prisoner. McGoohan's name was associated with several aborted attempts at producing a new movie version of The Prisoner.
Example of closing credits Closing credits to the animation film Big Buck Bunny. Closing credits, end credits and end titles are a list of the cast and crew of a particular motion picture, television show, and video game. While opening credits appear at the beginning of a work, closing credits appear close to, and at the very end of a work.
The first "Moana" ended with a post-credits scene featuring Tamatoa, the famously shiny crab.When “Moana 2,” the sequel to the 2016 Disney movie, is finished, is it worth sticking around to ...
Treasure Planet: Treasure Planet II: The cancelled direct-to-video sequel to the original film. In the sequel, Jim Hawkins and Kate, his love interest and classmate at the Royal Interstellar Academy, must team with Long John Silver to stop the villainous Ironbeard from freeing the inmates of Botany Bay Prison Asteroid.