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Transformice: The Cartoon Series: N/A 2015–2016 Atelier 801: An animated TV series based on the video game Transformice. Digital Woofy N/A 2004 Gaumont: In a household where no pets are allowed, a dog, in cahoots with his little boy master, passes himself off as a stuffed animal. Traditional X-DuckX: N/A 2001–2007 Gaumont
The cartoon features a man (known as "Mr. Linea") drawn as a single outline around his silhouette, walking on an infinite line of which he is a part. The character encounters obstacles and often turns to the cartoonist, represented as a live-action hand holding a white grease pencil, to draw him a solution, with various degrees of success. One ...
Line art emphasizes form and drawings, of several (few) constant widths (as in technical illustrations), or of freely varying widths (as in brush work or engraving). Line art may tend towards realism (as in much of Gustave Doré 's work), or it may be a caricature , cartoon , ideograph , or glyph .
A dog that can inflate her body enormously in the comic book series and the animated TV series; about a dog from Superman's planet living on Earth as the pet of a 9-year-old boy. (Also in the series are dogs Ace the Bathound, Bulldog, Paw Pooch, Tail Terrier, Tusky Husky, Hot Dog) Martha generic Martha Speaks
The French Bulldog (French: Bouledogue Français) is a French breed of companion dog or toy dog. It appeared in Paris in the mid-nineteenth century, apparently the result of cross-breeding of Toy Bulldogs imported from England and local Parisian ratters . [ 3 ]
A dog created by former Fleischer employees, hence the character's close similarity to Bimbo. Tomato Telerin Cleo & Cuquin: Bulldog: Cleo's family dog. Towser Towser: Terrier: Based on books published by Anderson Press, the children's television show released in fall of 1984 was narrated by Roy Kinnear and featured a dog with a bull terrier ...
The first French animated feature film. The animation was finished in 1930 but a soundtrack was only added in 1937, and it was a German one. A French-language version was released in 1941. La Demoiselle et le violoncelliste (The Girl and the Cellist), 1965, directed by Jean-François Laguionie. Laguionie's first film, which won the Annecy Grand ...
In 2009, art critic Tom Lubbock declared the painting "one of the most striking" chronophotography-inspired works, pointing to several features which create a comical effect: the "abrupt close-up" on a trivial subject—a "twee prim sausage dog"—which might have been a single detail in an Impressionist street scene; the bathetic juxtaposition ...