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Showing posts with label Animated Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animated Movies. Show all posts

Movies: Scooby Doo Camp Scare



Scooby-Doo: Camp Scare is the fifteenth of direct-to-DVD based upon the Scooby-Doo
Saturday






morning cartoons. It was
released on September 14, 2010 on DVD,
seven months after the release of the previous movie.


















Scooby Doo Camp Scare (2010)

DVDRip XviD AC3-ASPiRE


Language: English


Size: 1.37 GB

Genre: Comedy | Animation




Scooby and the gang took their vacation to Little Moose. They were
foreced to head to Big Moose for their much better summer vacation.
During the time, many things are very mysterious, as a story of the
Woodsman comes to life who takes over Little Moose scaring people. It
also forces on the Fishman in Big Moose scaring people away.
The gang began to solve one of their biggest mysteries they have ever
face. While spending time at the Big Moose, Scooby discovers an
underwater town before he and the gang are being attacked by the Fishman
all the way to Little Moose, making it their second mystery they're
going to find out why.

Meanwhile, the gang learned that the town titled the Moose Greek was
flooded in the past few years. By the time the dam exploaded, the gang
survives from getting drowned as the water destroys Little Moose as all
of the water from Big Moose went away as water covers off Moose Greek.
Deacon, who is mysterious seen in the scene, is revealed to be BabyFace
Boretti.



The gang than caught and stop the Fishman, who reveals to be Ranger
Knudsen, also disguse as the Woodsman. It was revealed that they both
teamed up to work together to search for the lost treasure hidden in
Moose Greek. The film ends with the gang spending summer together.

















Movies: The Legend Of Secret Pass



The 'Legend of Secret Pass' takes place in the mountains of the South West and involves Thunderbirds of





 Indian mythology and an animal refuge of mystical proportions.









The Legend Of Secret Pass

Ganre: Animation

Duration: 84 min

Size: 1 GB







An unlikely troop of animals and humans are caught up in a clash of ageless magic. In this moment of crisis, the barest chance to avoid cataclysm falls into the hands of an Indian boy, Manu.










Most movies rooted in Native American folklore tend to be overly earnest affairs, given to patronising anyone outside the Indian nation with solemn eco-messages broadcast from the spiritual high ground.

But while there’s no shortage of mystical mumbo-jumbo in this tale based on the myth of the shape-shifting Thunderbirds, it’s a refreshingly lively and contemporary affair. Even the chief villain wears jeans.

Manu (Muniz) is a headstrong teen who spends most of his time racing his truck around the roads and canyons surrounding the desert home he shares with his grandfather (Graham Greene, whose participation in any film involving American Indians is apparently mandatory), his distractingly foxy aunt (Curb Your Enthusiasm’s Hines) and his sparky cousin Nica.



What Manu doesn’t know is that he is the latest in a line of ‘guardians’ who maintain the relationship between humankind and Mother Nature.



 


Naturally, with great responsibility comes a smattering of power.  Manu discovers that not only can he talk to the animals, but he can influence the elements and transform himself into a bird.Yet while Manu’s parents died for the cause, his evil uncle Calabar (Michael Chiklis) has returned from exile and intends to use his power to rule over the natural world.

Granpa has no choice but to reveal the boy’s legacy. And as the next guardian, only he has the power to stop Calabar.

Of course, no animated quest is complete without a little non-human assistance, and Manu is duly accompanied by a brash lizard (Joe Pantoliano), a giddy lamb, a wise old turtle, a fat pigeon and a hapless chameleon clearly descended from the same evolutionary tree as the acorn-chasing Scrat from Ice Age.

On the side of darkness we have Ron ‘Hellboy’ Perlman as Parker, one of Calabar’s hench-warthogs.

Despite various plot points being as clear as smoke signals on a windy day, director Steve Trenbirth strikes a nice balance between subtlety, slapstick and swoop.

It doesn’t completely let him off the hook for The Jungle Book 2, but if you like your stories told with colour and energy, The Legend Of Secret Pass is an opportunity not to be mythed.


Elliott Noble









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