Popee, an apprentice clown, and his assistant, Kedamono, attempt various circus acts and go about their daily lives as performers. Things have a way of going wrong, however—whether it's a blinding rage, burning jealousy, or even something as simple as hunger, and their mentor, Papi, is little help to the chaos they tend to find themselves in.
Symfollies is a magic world. The inhabitants are the musical instruments from a symphonic orchestra. In Symfollies the leading characters are father Bass, mother Celine, their son Stradi and daughter Viola. Or all together: the violin family. Together with the other instruments of the symphonic orchestra, they go through exciting, funny and touching adventures.
The fun, imaginative, and not least educational antics never end when the two friends "Magnus and Myggen" – known and loved by all children from the popular PC games – set off on adventures. Skipper and Skeeto have now, for the first time, been made into a proper animated series, and in every episode, the good-natured but not always so clever mole, Magnus, and his small, intelligent friend, Myggen, constantly encounter new, exciting experiences together with Konrad the Cat, Fungy the Frog, Molly the Mouse, Kalle the Rabbit, and all the other residents of Paradise Park.
The hosts of the TV show are Piggy and Stepashka, familiar from childhood to the inhabitants of the USSR, who have only grown up and gained life experience, turned into Piggy Morzhov and Stepan Kapusta. These are computer characters who, together with the presenter, broadcast from the kitchen of the Pig or from the studio about political news and everyday problems. Hryun and Stepan are assisted by a regular correspondent, Philip Sharikov, and Genka's neighbor.
Loosely based on the baseball writing of W. P. Kinsella, the series was set in a world populated by anthropomorphic birds, and centred on the minor league baseball team in the town of Mynaville. The baseball games were represented by placing two-dimensional characters in three-dimensional backgrounds. The teams of bird characters were opposed by rival teams like the Weasels, the Pigs, the Beavers and the Elephants.
The animated misadventures of Lynn Johnston's acclaimed comic strip family. In 2000, Funbag Animation, based in Ottawa, created an animated "For Better or for Worse" series for Teletoon, which aired from November 5, 2000, to December 16, 2001. The show, introduced by Lynn Johnston, explored three storylines from different periods of the comic strip: the mid-1980s, early 1990s, and late 1990s.
Diabolik is an internationally co-produced animated television series, based on the Italian comic book series of the same name created by Angela and Luciana Giussani. The series features master thief Diabolik and his companion Eva, as they fight and gradually expos criminal organization known as the Brotherhood and his leader Dane, while evading Inspector Ginko.
Auto-B-Good is an American animated series. The series features short stories set in the fictional City of Auto, in which all the citizens are cars. The program is designed to teach children lessons in moral character and values. Auto-B-Good was produced by Wet Cement Productions, a Minnesota-based animation studio. In 2005 it won an Emmy award for graphics/animation in the non-news category and also was the recipient of three Telly Awards and three Aurora Awards. In 2006, Auto-B-Good won 4 more Emmy Awards for Audio/Post Production, Musical Composition/Arrangement, Graphic Arts and Animation, Children/Youth Program Feature/Segment/Special.
Tommy and Oscar is an Italian animated television series created by Max Alessandrini and Iginio Straffi, and produced by the Italian company Rainbow S.r.l. and by RAI Fiction. There was the movie in this series that was going to be released in 2004, but it is unreleased.
This action and adventure comedy is drawn in simple appearance and combines cute forest animals with extreme graphic violence. Each episode revolves around the characters enduring accidental events of bloodshed, pain, dismemberment and/or death.
Rayman: The Animated Series, or The Rayman TV Series, is a French 3-D animated children's television series featuring the French video game hero Rayman. Created by Ubisoft and based on the Rayman adventure game series, the show was originally in French but was dubbed into various languages for foreign countries. Ubisoft was able to produce only four episodes and never managed to broadcast its episodes in the United States.