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#The Return of Dogtanian
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Here's some frames of a fazed Richelieu.
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dreadmom · 17 days
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Inspired by the constant videos and weebcomic about reincarnating in other worlds or going back in time The life of D'Artagnan the human ended tragically when he was considered a traitor (he was used as a scapegoat) and was abandoned by those he trusted and loved. Emotionally broken, the Gascon abandoned everything and headed to the lands of La Ferre. where he ended his life. Just as his eyes closed he opened them again as a young mouse named Alexander, illegitimate son of a French nobleman who has suffered mistreatment all his life from family and servants, the memories of his past life returned just after receiving another great beating by his half-brothers, after seeing his surroundings again he realizes that not only is he in a world where instead of humans there are anthropomorphic animals, but the date, he finds himself a year before he began his journey to become a musketeer, but also something else, this entire family is about to be arrested and executed by order of the crown when it is discovered that they were helping enemies of France ... I'm leaving... that's all he thought, so even though he was wounded, he forced himself to stand up and left the place without anyone knowing. A year later, when the young and impulsive Dogtanian arrives in France, he is disconcerted to see the tension between the Muskehounds and the hostility they show towards his name. When he spoke with Treville, he told him that his three best muskehounds, Pontos, Dogos and Amis, were seriously wounded by a single Cardinal's Guard who called himself D'Artagnan
This Cardinal's Guard was none other than Alexander, who is now under the orders of Cardinal Richelieu, using the name of his past life and the knowledge of it, he has every intention of taking revenge on those who hurt them while avoiding that they discover that he is the fugitive son of the family of traitors that was executed Notes: ° The appearance of this D'Artagnan is from Geronimo Stilton's version of the Three Musketeers, that includes part of the suit he wears ° His name Alexander is after the novel's author, Alexander Dumas.
----------------------------------- Inspirado en  los constantes videos y weebcomic sobre reencarnar en otros mundos o regresos en el tiempo
La vida de D'Artagnan el humano, termino de forma trágica al ser considerado un traidor (fue usado de chivo expiatorio) y ser abandonado por quienes confió y amo, emocionalmente roto, el gascon abandona todo, se dirigio a las tierras de La Ferre donde acabo con su vida.
Justo cuando sus ojos se cerraron volvió a abrirlos como un joven ratón llamado Alexander, hijo ilegitimo de un noble de Francia quien ha sufrido maltratos toda su vida por parte de la familia y los sirvientes, los recuerdos de su vida pasada volvieron justo después de recibir otra gran paliza por parte de sus medios hermanos, tras ver de nuevo sus alrededores se da cuenta que no solo esta en un mundo donde en vez de humanos hay animales antropomórficos si no la fecha, se encuentra un año antes de que empezara su viaje para convertirse en mosquetero, pero también algo mas, toda esta familia esta a punto ser arrestada y ejecutada por orden de la corona al descubrirse que ayudaban a enemigos de Francia
…Yo me largo…es todo lo que pensó por lo que aun herido se obliga a ponerse de pie y abandona el lugar sin que nadie lo sepa
Un año después cuando el joven e impulsivo  D'Artacán llega Francia, se desconcierta al ver la tensión entre los mosqueperros y la hostilidad que muestran hacia su nombre, cuando hablo con Treville este le conto que sus tres mejores mosqueperro Pontos, Dogos y Amis fueron gravemente heridos por un único Guardia de Cardenal que se hacia llamar D'Artagnan
Este Guardia del Cardenal no era otro que Alexander, quien ahora esta bajo las ordenes del Cardenal Richelieu , usando el nombre de su vida pasada y el conocimiento de la misma tiene toda la intención de vengarse de aquellos quienes los hirieron a la vez que debe evitar que descubran que es el hijo fugitivo de la familia de traidores que fue ejecutada
Notas:
° La apariencia de este D'Artagnan es del la versión de los Tres Mosqueteros de Geronimo Stilton, eso incluye parte del traje que lleva ° Su nombre Alexander es por el autor de la novela, Alexander Dumas
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aramis-likes-men · 1 year
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What do you think happened to Aramis' girlfriend between the events of the original show and Return of Dogtanian?
Omg.......i didn't expect someone to ask me this question, i thought i was the only one who noticed the absence of Aramis's girlfriend in the sequel. Well, i like to imagine Aramis breaking up with his gf after finding out she was cheating him with another dog. The reason? Well, since Aramis is a musketeer and will always be busy, he definitely spends less time with her. So her reason would be that she doesn't get enough attention from him. But hey, now that he doesn't have a girlfriend anymore, he can focus more on his duty as a musketeer!
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innudoggy · 5 years
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My Dogtanian cosplay from Desucon. I glued the boot covers to my shoes this time, and it worked wonders. One of my froends was Pip the mouse and the other Milady. 😁
I’m having ”a convention hangover” right now. Can I please go back to con? 🥺😢
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cultfaction · 3 years
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Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds trailer released
Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds trailer released
Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds is being remade for the big screen and it arrives on June 25th 2021. The original cartoon series was a hit throughout the 1980’s and early 90’s where it was often repeated and there was also a sequel series The Return of Dogtanian. The theme tune was also popular throughout the playground! In fact if you know it, you are probaby humming it now! Dogtanian is an…
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aion-rsa · 2 years
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Sky Cinema: What’s New in November 2021?
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Sky Cinema subscribers of a certain age will be already practising their in-air sword-based apple slicing in readiness for the arrival of Dogtanian and the Muskehounds on November the 8th, but there’s something for all tastes and ages in our pick of the daily movie highlights below. How about the Mortal Kombat reboot, or the return of the titular Critters in 2019 horror comedy Critters Attack? Read on in our handy guide.
Movie Premieres & Sky Originals
Snatchers – 3rd November American sci-fi comedy horror about an extra-terrestrial teen pregnancy, featuring comedian Rich Fulcher.
Meander – 4th November French sci-fi action film with shades of Cube, about a woman trapped in a mysterious deadly maze.
Mortal Kombat – 5th November Martial arts fantasy rebooting the original film series, based on the cult favourite video game. Iron Fist’s Lewis Tan stars.
Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds – 8th November A feature-length Spanish CGI version of the beloved 1980s cartoon based on the famous Alexandre Dumas novel.
Critters Attack! – 9th November 2019 reboot of cult horror favourite Critters for which reviews were not kind.
The Colour Room – 12th November A Sky Original starring Bridgerton’s Phoebe Dynevor as 1920s ceramics artist Clarice Cliff, and A Discovery of Witches’ Matthew Goode.
Read more
Games
How Mortal Kombat Became the Best Selling Fighting Game Franchise Ever
By Matthew Byrd
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How Mortal Kombat Legends: Battle of the Realms Delivers a Real Mortal Kombat 2 Movie
By Gavin Jasper
Embattled – 14th November Stephen Dorff stars in this MMA action drama about a father and son.
Daphne & Velma – 15th November You wanted to know what Scooby Doo’s Daphne and Velma were up to in high school? This live-action prequel is your chance to find out.
Military Wives – 19th November Kristin Scott Thomas and Sharon Horgan play the partners of soldiers overseas in Afghanistan who start a choir. Based on a true story and directed by The Full Monty’s Peter Cattaneo.
Locked Down – 20th November Anne Hathaway and Chiwetel Ejiofor star in a rom-com heist thriller, written and produced during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Lorelei – 23rd November A well-reviewed drama starring The Hunger Games’ Jena Malone and American Gods’ Pablo Schreiber about a man released from prison who reunites with an old flame.
Riders of Justice – 24th November Mads Mikkelsen leads a decent cast in the story of a bereaved husband on a revenge mission.
A Boy Called Christmas – 26th November Start feeling festive with this live-action adaptation of Matt Haig’s book, about a young boy and his CGI pet mouse venturing in search of his father. Stephen Merchant, Maggie Smith, Jim Broadbent, Kristen Wiig and Sally Hawkins star.
Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase – 29th November It’s Sophia Lillis plays the US teen detective in this 2019 revival of the beloved book character.
Coming in December
Last Train to Christmas – 18th December Michael Sheen and Nathalie Emmanuel star in this Sky Original about a man travelling home for Christmas who finds himself on a train that lets him revisit different parts of his life.
A Christmas Number One Freida Pinto and Iwan Rheon star in this rom-com about a music producer and the uncle of a seriously ill teenage girl who wants him to get the Christmas number one spot.
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Read more about Sky Cinema packages here.
The post Sky Cinema: What’s New in November 2021? appeared first on Den of Geek.
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iamanathemadevice · 6 years
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Why Tom, Santi, and Howie, all hate Luke* :-)
Formal Training
Tom: went to RADA
Santi: London's Drama Centre
Howie: Kingston College from 2000 to 2005, gaining a diploma in Performing Arts before returning to obtain a BA in stage and media acting; London Drama Centre
Luke: drama classes at high school, learned how to reach a mark on first TV job, advised to be ‘less eyebrowy’, failed to learn how to skateboard for first major role
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Preparation for The Musketeers
Tom: Has read entire Dumas oeuvre
Santi: Has read entire Dumas oeuvre in French
Howie: Read Musketeer books (I think) and has read up about Dumas himself
Luke: Watched Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds
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Resumé
Tom by the age of 27: A number of bit parts, several TV movies, several short films, two small British movies, (and extensive stage work)
Santi by the age of 27: no film or TV roles listed at all, stage work
Howie by the age of 27: one bit part, stage work
Luke by the age of 27: five lead roles in major TV series, important role in major Hollywood film, large roles in 3 other films, bit parts in other TV series (no stage acting)
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*They really don’t hate him :)
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allesiathehedge · 6 years
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Hey, remember me? Yeah, you do. Did you ever watch "Dogtanian and the three muskehounds" or contunation of this cartoon "The return of Dogtanian"? If not, watch this immideatly! I loved this cartoon so much, then I was child. But "The return of Dogtanian" I saw few days ago (that was so hard to me to translate this cartoon on Russian. They never showed this magnificient cartoon in my country т-т. I am still very bad in English language((.) Also, can you draw any pictures about this? :3
I don’t think it’d be wise of you to ask an artist to do that thing. And I’ve never watched that show, but I will only when I have time so thanks! 
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britesparc · 5 years
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Weekend Top Ten #352
Top Ten Cartoons of my Childhood
After last week’s celebration of cinematic vulgarity (in which our hero, despite dropping more Fs and Cs than an explosion at a Scrabble factory, still managed to forget about Nick Frost in Shaun of the Dead), I wanted to restore balance to the Force somewhat by turning the clock back to simpler, more gentle times. In fact, we’re rewinding eighty-plus years by looking at children’s cartoons of my youth.
So here we have, quite simply, my favourite cartoons from when I was a kid. Now I’m saying “when I was a kid” to mean the 1980s – despite the fact that I was, really, still a kid for most of the 90s too. But Batman: The Animated Series debuted early in the 90s, and at that point I think the crossover between what I loved as a nipper and what I love now started to happen. I don’t think I can rank where Young David would place Batman without Old David weighing in to call it the greatest animated show of all time (fun fact: it is). So I’ve stuck to the 80s, which rules out the likes of Animaniacs, Reboot, Tiny Toons, Aladdin, X-Men, and loads more. Maybe I should have just called this “cartoons of the 80s” and been done with it. But here we are.
So, in conclusion: these are, to the best of my memory, my favourite cartoons from when I was a small boy. I’ve tried to think about what I loved and remembered from back then, rather than attempt to appraise what the shows are like nowadays; many of these I’ve not seen for decades, and some of them really do not hold up (Turtles in particular is rather shonky, and even my beloved Transformers varies wildly in quality). But they are what they are, and exist as articles of their time; I loved all of these as a nipper, and in many cases went out of my way to get comics, books, toys, and other manner of merchandise relating to my favourite telly programmes.
Now let’s take a trip down memory lane!
The Transformers (1984-1987): I mean, come on; how could I not? This show casts a longer shadow than anything else. I’ve also watched more of it than other shows, and more recently, so I can confidently say that although it was a relatively cheap toy cartoon from 35 years ago, a lot of it holds up well, so strong were some of these characters and the inherent concept of Robots in Disguise.
The Real Ghostbusters (1986-1991): I loved Ghostbusters almost as much as Transformers. I had the fire station, Ecto-1, a proton pack, the works. I’ve watched some of this relatively recently, too, and it’s very, very good – Old David likes it a lot more than the 80s Transformers toon. There’s even an episode where they bust Orson Welles’ ghost. True story.
Garfield TV Specials (1982-1991): I’m specifically talking about the often whimsical, frequently bittersweet, sometimes bonkers specials that aired sporadically throughout the 80s, many of which I owned on VHS. I remember CITV showed the first few in short groups, so it felt like a short Garfield TV series; but the invention and beautiful painterly style stuck with me, along with the music. Garfield and Friends (’88-’95) also gets a warm mention here, but was wackier and skewed younger, and even as a kid I didn’t love it as much as the more complicated Specials. Also shout out to Happy Birthday, Garfield, which was a behind-the-scenes look at Jim Davis and the Garfield machine, and was a phenomenal influence on little me.
Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles (1987-1996): funnily enough, I always associate the Turtles with the 90s, but I know they debuted in the 80s and I think the TV series aired over here in 1989, so I’m counting it anyway. Turtles was kind of a defining “Big Show” for me as I entered double digits, replacing previous faves Transformers and Ghostbusters (I think Garfield continued in the background as a comic strip). I obsessed over the toys and the merch and the fact that we were denied ninjas and nunchucks on this side of the pond. For shame. Last time I saw the original show I thought it was awful, however.
Muppet Babies (1984-1991): oh, I loved this. I’d have been quite young I guess, although probably the same age as when I was watching Transformers, so go figure. But this was really my main intro to the Muppets, and I remember when they more-or-less featured the Muppet Babies in Muppets Take Manhattan, and seeing them rendered in live-action blew my tiny mind.
The Raccoons (1985-1992): this show seemed to go on forever, a mainstay of my childhood. I remember watching the original TV movie/special, with its human cast and the dogs that go into the woods looking for a star, or something, and finding it a bit weird that those characters were more or less ditched in the series proper. But I still loved it, and I remember it as being rather sophisticated and more complicated than the usual kids’ fair; Cyril Sneer was, obviously, a bad guy, but I seem to remember him becoming complicated and genuinely loving his son who he didn’t quite understand, and slowly warming up over the course of the show. He wasn’t Megatron or Skeletor, is what I’m saying. Plus you had Bert Raccoon, who was a bit of an arse and not always in the right, either. I’ve not seen it in years so maybe I’m misremembering, but Little David found it compelling.
Count Duckula (1988-1993): I know Duckula debuted on Danger Mouse, and I did watch DM too, but really I’m all about the duck. Being a big fan of vampires I was all over this, and I just found everything about it hilarious. I was a bit of a Yankophile too, so I liked that David Jason gave him an American accent. I had tons of Duckula comics, most of which I reckon we threw away. But yeah – loved this show.
Duck Tales (1987-1990): sticking with the duck theme, we have this gem. One of the greatest themes in TV history, and humanity’s favourite Scot, Scrooge McDuck. This was a rollicking, hilarious adventure show with tons of personality, and really helped to kickstart the Disney animation boom of the late 80s/early 90s, which in my mind also encompassed things like Roger Rabbit and the resurgent animated movies, too. I even went to see the movie! I’ve yet to see the remake, sadly, but I applaud the casting of David Tennant.
Inspector Gadget (1983-1986): who didn’t love Inspector Gadget? I think this was probably one of those where it was the repetition of tropes and scenes – “sorry about that, Chief”, “I’ll get you next time, Gadget!” – that made it popular. Gadget was cool, Claw was scary, Brains was funny; this was top-drawer telly. I even wrote a synopsis, a few years ago, for a movie sequel called Inspector Gadget Returns, in which Gadget is old and washed-up, and a grown-up Penny has to bring him out of retirement when Dr. Claw returns. Kinda wish I was an established screenwriter so I could pitch it to someone, to be honest.
Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds (1981-1982): aw, this show was very sweet. I remember watching it when I was very young (it’s the only show on this list that basically pre-dates me!), and my mum would do the voices of the characters for me. I really don’t remember it very well or how it holds up, but I know that for a little while there, it was seriously my jam. Teeny Tiny David loved it something rotten. If we’re sticking with anthropomorphised animals doing classic literature, I remember Willy Fog much better, funnily enough, but this just sneaks in based on that early childhood love.
Well, there we go. Now I want to watch all of these again. And Willy Fog, for that matter.
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minitravellers · 7 years
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So according to BBC breakfast today my generation (those born between 77 and 83) are called the Xennials - apparently we forged the way between the old & new and got the best of both worlds! We experienced a childhood of playing outside, children's TV, Mattel toys and the first home computers & consoles. Our generation saw the original Transformers, Care Bears, My Little Ponies and He-man. We adopted Cabbage Patch kids with squished faces, strange names and autographed bottoms. We had the Broom Cupboard, Going Live and Wacaday. We appreciated that we had 2 hours of tv that was just for us at the end of the school day. We sang the tunes to Willy Fogg and Dogtanian and thought that Cities of Gold would never end. We thought that Dynasty was super glamorous and Byker Grove was gritty. We all wanted to live on Ramsay Street and we cried when Scott and Charlene got married. (We secretly knew all along that Plain Jane would be pretty once she took her glasses off.) We watched Degrassi Junior High, read Sweet Valley High and wished we went to school in America. We got excited when the tv trolley was wheeled into our classrooms and had one BBC master computer that we got to use as a treat...usually to make a robot go round a maze or something equally as exciting. It didn't matter though because the BBC Master used floppy discs which were a thousand times faster than the cassettes we used on our Commodore 64s at home! We remember the countdown clock that the BBC showed before their school programmes & can remember being genuinely scared whilst watching 'Dark Towers.' The last day of school was games day and someone always brought in Screwball Scramble which nobody could ever complete! We could create our own games without staring at a computer screen. We played tag, denio 123 and British Bulldog (before the teachers banned it!) In the summertime a sprinkler could provide hours of fun. We didn't watch YouTube videos of people unboxing toys - we played with our own! A 'Choose your own Adventure' book allowed us to choose our own destiny - especially when we could go back to page 22 to avoid being killed! We learnt how to make plans without the need for WhatsApp, group messenger or email. We chatted for hours to our Friends on the land line & got yelled at by our dads when the phone bill arrived! Our friends were actual people that we knew - not online followers. We received real cards on our birthdays not text messages or exploding marshmallows and had to write actual thank you letters to our Grandma's rather than sending a message online. The postman used to come twice a day and there was no online shopping so the delivery of a parcel usually meant a present! Oh and we all really really wanted a Mr Frosty for Christmas but never ever got one! We took proper photos on actual cameras and had to wait for them to be developed before we could see how awful we looked. A 'selfie' was taken at arms length and usually came back from Truprint with an 'over exposed' sticker on it! There were no filters to disguise those spots & red eyes but on the plus side there was less embarrassment as the images would not be posted on social media for all the World to see! We had to use an actual book for our high school homework but discovered the joys of 'Ask Jeeves' as we did our A-levels - that was if our Mum wasn't on the phone hogging our dial up internet connection. At university we typed our essays & dissertations on a word processor as there were no laptops. We queued up to use the computer suites but spent most of our time sending long emails to other friends at uni rather than doing any work! We owned mobile phones that could not fit in your pocket and could only text people on the same network as you. We spent hours playing Snake on our Nokia 3310s. We all knew someone who had a pager but we could never really see the point in them! We grew up watching the greatest films ever made; Ghostbusters, The Goonies, Grease and Gremlins. We all watched Karate Kid and believed we could be a champion too because we could 'wax on...wax off.' We watched Dirty Dancing and hoped that one day we would have a holiday romance with a Patrick Swayze look a like. We watched the Back to The Future trilogy and worked out how old we would be in 2015 which seemed so far away. We grew up with an awareness of the World that our parents did not have. We giggled at 'Position of the fortnight' in More magazine and all read 'Forever' by Judy Bloom, but were still innocent enough to be shocked by Zammo's drug addiction on Grange Hill, PJ being shot in the eye with a paintball gun and the uncensored lyrics to 'Don't stop' (wiggle wiggle) by the Outhere Brothers. And as for the naked man playing tennis on the beach in the early sex education videos we watched at school - we were totally traumatised!! We also grew up to be more considerate of others. We remember the original Band Aid single and all the subsequent re-releases (even the dodgy 1990 version featuring Bros & Sonia) We can recall the horror we felt when John Craven showed us images of starving children in Ethiopia. We were the Blue Peter 'Bring & Buy sale' generation raising money for wells in Africa & orphans in Romania. We were fearful when we heard about the hole in the Ozone layer and embraced the 'No animal testing' mantra of the Body Shop. We saw the first televised lesbian kiss on Brookside, watched Mark die of AIDS on Eastenders and saw the demise of the old-school racist, homophobic & sexist comedians. We remember when a 10 penny mix up bought you 10 (or more!) sweets! When a MrFreeze cost 5p and Curly Wurlys were really long! We know the excitement of opening a box of cereal to retrieve the free gift hidden inside. We remember proper milk bottles on the doorstep & Barr pop where you got 20p back when you returned the bottle. We can never hear the words 'Accrington Stanley' without replying 'Who are they?' In a dodgy scouse accent. We didn't wear the most stylish of clothes & we never posted photos to share our daily outfits. Tammy Girl was the only place to shop till you fitted into Topshop sizes. A gift basket from Body Shop was the ultimate birthday gift and we slathered ourselves in Dewberry, White Musk, Exclaimation & Impulse believing that one day a stranger would actually stop to give us flowers on the street just like the advert. We made the move from vinyl to cassette and Cd. The Walkman was the ultimate accessory and we taped the top 40 every Sunday desperately trying to avoid the DJs voice! We read Smash Hits and Look In and tried to learn all the words to 'Joe le Taxi' because Vanessa Paradis seemed so sexy & aloof. We hoped one day that a boyfriend would present us with a mix tape but in the meanwhile we made our own. We boosted our cd collections by repeatedly subscribing to Brittania Music. Of course we now all have iTunes but we still can't bring ourselves to throw away our cd collections! We went to university before tuition fees and bought houses before prices became inaccessible. We watched Big Brother when it was good and cheered when Craig ousted Nasty Nick. We saw people become famous because they were talented - not just because they appeared on a reality show. We were old enough to be out partying on Millenium Eve and were relieved that the World did not succumb to the Millennium bug after all; no planes fell out of the sky and no nuclear bombs were launched by accident! We travelled more than our parents did thanks to the emergence of budget airlines, teletext holidays, inter-railing, Club 18-30 and Twentys. We thought we were so independent but still wanted our dads to drive us to the airport & still had to give our parents 'three rings' to let them know we had arrived safely. So yes, to all those who like me were the babies of the late 1970s, the children of the 80s, the teens of the 90s and the young adults of the new millenium, I think we did get the best deal. More technically savvy than our parents but experienced enough to know that social media & technology are not the be all and end all. To be honest I am pretty proud to be a Xennial - aren't you? http://ift.tt/2t37FoE
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dianamonka9-blog · 7 years
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The Return of Dogtanian Theme Song
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What a man... Forget becoming a monk, Aramis should get hitched with his girlfriend.
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But then again, maybe not.
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anpandough · 9 years
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STOP
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cultfaction · 7 years
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The Return of Dogtanian
The Return of Dogtanian
The Return of Dogtanian was the sequel series to Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds. It was released by BRB Internacional, Thames Television and Wang Film Productions.
The cartoon series picks up ten years after the original story ends, with Dogtanian and Juliette now married and living together on the outskirts of Paris with their…
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dan-the-dragon · 9 years
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The second series of Dogtanian isnt as good as the first but its sure as hell got a banging remix of the opening theme
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The muskehounds are concerned about you.
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