i want 60 thousand votes by next thursday
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Technically that 3rd option, though when it comes to those first 2 options, I’m always going to say Vegeta because at that point he was powerful enough to destroy Cell and Android 18, but decided not to because of his ego-err, I mean pride.
In your opinion, who do you think fumbled the most during the cell saga:
Vegeta for not killing semi-perfect cell
Krillin for destroying the remote
Or goku and vegeta for not killing the androids while they had the chance?
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Special Poster ''The Saiyans have arrived on Earth''!
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Happy 35th Anniversary to Dragon Ball Z!
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This and the Vegeta one have been the best ones I’ve seen so far.
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It’s funny you referenced Katzenberg because by the time that reissue occurred in November 1994, Katzenberg had already left Disney to start up DreamWorks (but if he were still with the company at that point, it wouldn’t be surprising if he pushed for that reissue as well).
Disney really had no chill in the 90s when it came to crushing their competition.
November 1994: After being a big hit that summer, Disney re-released The Lion King that November around the same time as The Swan Princess and The Pagemaster from Rich Entertainment and Turner Feature Animation respectively.
April 1995: Disney releases A Goofy Movie a week before Don Bluth’s The Pebble and the Penguin.
March 1996: Disney re-releases Oliver and Company on the same weekend as MGM’s All Dogs Go to Heaven 2.
November 1997: Disney re-releases The Little Mermaid on the same weekend as Don Bluth’s Anastasia.
HONORABLE MENTIONS (sort of)
Throughout the 1980s Disney went through a financial slump with their animated films while Don Bluth was leading the charge with his movies. There were 2 instances during that period where Bluth released his movies on the same weekends as a Disney one and ended up beating one of them at the box office.
November 1988: Disney’s initial release of Oliver and Company against Don Bluth’s The Land Before Time in which the latter film made more money.
November 1989: Don Bluth’s All Dogs Go to Heaven is pitted against Disney’s The Little Mermaid and as most people Disney ended up being the victor in this case by a significant margin (All Dogs grossed around $27 million vs. the $84 million that Mermaid grossed) and started thus began the Disney Renaissance.
November 1991: Without Bluth’s involvement, Steven Spielberg’s Amblination studio produced a sequel to the 1986 film An American Tail called An American Tail: Fievel Goes West. Amblimation released it against the latest Disney movie at the time: a tale as old as time that ended up becoming the first animated film to be nominated for Best Picture. I’m of course talking about Beauty and the Beast.
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this may be the greatest thing in history, or at least this month
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animaniacs is such a genius premise for a show. it’s like—here, have the funny puppy children that can be inserted into any scenario in any time period or parody and be entertaining. oh, don’t like that? not your thing? that’s cool. we’ve got a million other things up our sleeves and a ton of musical numbers you’ll never get out of your head.
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