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#doraemon: nobita's dinosaur
someawesomeamvs · 1 year
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Warning: Potential spoilers
Title: Jurassic Voyage
Editor: Opner
Song: Mountain Sound
Artist: Of Monsters and Men
Anime: Doraemon: Nobita's Dinosaur (2006) (film)
Category: Drama
Award: POE 2022 Extraordinary Voyages - MomoCon Theme Award
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albertonykus · 5 months
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Doraemon Long Stories Vol. 8: Nobita and the Knights on Dinosaurs
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My review of this story's movie adaptation can be found here.
I don't have much to say about this one spoiler-wise, but I got much the same impression as I did from the movie version: the story takes a bit too long to get to the point, making this an unfortunate example of a Doraemon entry where the premise is arguably more interesting than the plot.
Curiously, in the manga, Doraemon is shown using a gadget to allow himself to breathe underwater, even though he canonically doesn't need to breathe. Maybe even the author forgot that Doraemon was supposed to be a robot sometimes, or maybe Doraemon was "setting an example" for the kids, as he apparently does when he goes to the bathroom.
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Notably, this scene was changed for the movie: Doraemon heads straight into the water at first, and has to be reminded that the kids can't breathe down there.
Also interesting is that the manga contains a reference to the events of Nobita and the Haunts of Evil.
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myanimethought · 2 years
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Doraemon: Nobita's Dinosaur is the first part of the Doraemon feature film. It is an adaptation of the book of the same name by Daichōhen
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enderina · 2 years
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Piisuke, my beloved
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doraemon-facts · 7 months
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Is Doraemon's head soft or hard?
Many times Doraemon's head changes shape when it gets hit, making it seem soft.
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Source: ペコペコバッタ, 1970 (manga)
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Source: 人間製造機, 1974 (manga)
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Source: 機械化機, 1982 (manga)
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Source: あいつを固めちゃえ, 1982 (manga)
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His head was once run through by an arrow. (But he didn't seem hurt by this.)
Source: ご先祖さまがんばれ, 1970 (manga)
Gian and Shizuka have hit him without hurting themselves.
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Source: Nobita and the Knights on Dinosaurs, 1987 (manga, Doraemon Long Stories)
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Source: あとからアルバム, 1983 (manga)
But other times when Doraemon is hit, his head stays rigid.
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Source: エスパーぼうし, 1970 (manga)
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Source: しんじゅせいぞうロボット, 1974 (manga)
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He once battered down a prison door with his head, saying his hard head was his ultimate weapon.
Source: Nobita and the Kingdom of Clouds, 1992 (manga, Doraemon Long Stories)
After this, Doraemon uses his "ultimate weapon" many times, especially in movies and special episodes.
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Source: Nobita in the Robot Kingdom, 2002
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Source: 決戦!ネコ型ロボットvsイヌ型ロボット, 2010 (episode from 2005 anime)
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Source: Nobita's Treasure Island, 2018
So what is the answer? The official statement right now is that Doraemon's head might be soft most of the time, but can be hardened when he is tense!
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mediasaurs · 8 months
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T. rex Madness Round 1 Masterpost
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All round 1 polls are here!
Prehistoric Planet (Hank) vs. Dinosaur Office (Terry)
Extreme Dinosaurs (T-Bone) vs Doctor Who (Deep Breath T. rex)
Fossil Specimen (Black Beauty: RTMP 81.6.1) vs There Are Tyrannosaurs Trying On Pants in My Bedroom
DC Comics (Batcave T. rex) vs Old grocery store T. rex toy
Doraemon: Nobita’s Dinosaur (T. rex) vs Ice Age (Momma Dino)
Dinosaur Revolution (Junior) vs Dinosaur Island (2014/2015)
Prehistoric Park (Terrence) vs Barney (Barney)
T. Rex the band vs. Prehistoric Park (Matilda)
Digimon (Tyrannomon) vs. Prehistoric Kingdom T. rex
Project for Awesome (T. Rax) vs. Safari Ltd. Feathered T. rex
You are Umasou (Heart) vs. Fossil Specimen (Jane BMRP 2002.4.1)
Jurassic Park (Rexy) vs. Dinosaurs (Roy Hess)
Night at the Museum (Rexy) vs. The Lost World (1925)
Beast Wars (Megatron) vs. Chrome game T. rex
Pokémon (Tyranitar) vs. Pokémon (Tyrantrum)
Fossil Specimen (Stan BHI 3033) vs. Toy Story (Rex)
Charles Knight T. rex vs. Transformers (Grimlock)
Theodore Rex (Theodore Rex) vs. Walking With (Mother T. rex)
Super Mario Odyssey (T. rex) vs. Banjo Tooie (T. rex Banjo)
Fossil Specimen (Sue FMNH PR 2081) vs. Jimmy Neutron “Sorry, Wrong Era” T. rex
King Kong 1933 (Tyrannosaurus rex) vs. Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers (Tyrannosaurus Dinozord)
Marvel Comics (Devil Dinosaur) vs. Fossil Specimen (Rexy AMNH 5027)
When Dinosaurs Roamed America (Narrated by John Goodman) vs. We’re Back! (Rex, voiced by John Goodman)
The Magic School Bus (T. rex) vs. Sinclair Dinoland 1964 World’s Fair
King of the Dinosaurs by Michael Berenstain vs. Dinosaur Train (Buddy)
The Good Dinosaur (Ramsey) vs. Meet the Robinsons (Tiny)
Fossil Specimen (B-rex: MOR 1125) vs. Primal (Fang)
The Land Before Time (Chomper) vs. Project G.e.e.K.e.R. (Noah)
Saurian T. rex vs. Gravity Falls (T. rex in amber)
Jurassic Park (Lost World family) vs. 3D Dinosaur Adventure (Assembled T. rex)
Fantasia (Rite of Spring T. rex) vs. Prehysteria! (Elvis)
Yu-Gi-Oh! (Ultimate Conductor Tyranno) vs. Prehistoric Planet (Flirt Man)
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mapsontheweb · 2 years
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Countries and territories the Doraemon franchise has visited through >70 movies.
UnadamantlySmall:
The Doraemon franchise takes place somewhere in suburban Tokyo, Japan. While some of its movie sets take place in another planet/world (2019 takes place on the Moon), they have also travelled throughout the world through its numerous movies. In order of mainline appearance, the list of places include:
1980: Nobita's Dinosaur in USA and Canada (remade in 2006)
1982: Nobita and the Haunts of Evil in Democratic Republic of Congo (remade in 2014, my personal favorite movie)
1984: Nobita's Great Adventure into the Underworld in Croatia (remade in 2007)
1988: The Record of Nobita's Parallel Visit to the West in People's Republic of China (also featured in 1989's Nobita and the Birth of Japan that would be remade in 2016. Xinjiang and Tibet were also featured in 2003's Nobita and the Windmasters)
1991: Nobita's Dorabian Nights in Iraq
1992: Nobita and the Kingdom of Clouds in Germany (also featured in 2001's Nobita and the Winged Braves)
1993: Nobita and the Tin Labyrinth in Italy
1994: Nobita's Three Visionary Swordsmen in France
1997: Nobita and the Spiral City in Slovenia
1998: Nobita's Great Adventure in the South Seas in Oceania (country not specified)
2000: Nobita and the Legend of the Sun King in Mexico (shut-out to Austria's Wiener Sängerknaben (GER: Vienna Boys' Choir) for providing the opening track for this movie)
2002: Nobita in the Robot Kingdom in Ukraine
2003: Nobita and the Windmasters in Mongolia
2004: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey in New Zealand
2010: Nobita's Great Battle of the Mermaid King in Palau
2012: Nobita and the Island of Miracles—Animal Adventure in Fiji
2013: Nobita's Secret Gadget Museum in United Kingdom
2017: Nobita's Great Adventure in the Antarctic Kachi Kochi
2018: Nobita's Treasure Island in The Carribean (country not specified)
Edit: 1983's Nobita and the Castle of Undersea Devil took place somewhere in The Atlantic Ocean. While not part of the mainline movies, the Doraemon franchise has also visited The Netherlands, Belgium, and Switzerland in 藤子不二雄スペシャル ドラえもん・ヨーロッパ鉄道の旅 (JP: Fujiko Fujio Special Doraemon: Europe Rail Travel). The Doraemons spin-off includes characters from Spain, Russia, and Brazil.
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dimalink · 5 months
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Little dino – goes to a friend and alien invasion
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Pixel art for today based on videogame Doraemon – Nobita no Dorabian Night for game console PC Engine. It is platformer from 1991. Game is bright and colorful.
And this is my drawing about the same theme. I have here a kind little dinosaurs. Kind good little dinosaur is going as a guest to a friend Pteranodon. He is going by a road. And it is a forest everywhere around. High trees. Good weather. Dinosaur has lots of live energy. Because he is big.
Pteranodon has met him. But thing is, that Pteranodon can fly and fly over obstacles. And little dino needs to jump over. Jump over the obstacles.
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As a bird shows the way. It will be a long road. Because of lots of obstacles. And also it is moving here some aliens. You need to send them all back to space. Throw them away into it. And also, you can jump at them as Mario can do it. And they fly away to their space.
And some little ufo is here also. So some aliens are here.
It is such adventure island ahead!
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Dima Link is making retro videogames, apps, a little of music, write stories, and some retro more.
WEBSITE: http://www.dimalink.tv-games.ru/home_eng.html
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sunekichi · 11 months
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Doraemon's Success
☆ Movies
3 doraemon movies were the highest grossing animated movie worldwide in 3 different years; the movies were doraemon: nobita's dinosaur (1980), doraemon: nobita's great adventure into the underworld (1984), doraemon: nobita and the knights on dinosaurs (1987).
doraemon is: the 10th highest grossing animated movie franchise worldwide, the highest grossing movie franchise in japan and the highest grossing non-english movie franchise in the world.
☆ Manga
doraemon is the 6th best selling comic series worldwide. the ranking includes japanese manga and european/american comic series/graphic novels. considering doraemon is the only children's manga in the top 10, it's the best selling one worldwide.
doraemon is the 5th best selling manga of all time in japan. no other children's manga appears in the ranking, making it the best selling one in japan, too.
☆ Cultural Impact
in 2008 the japanese ministry of foreign affairs appointed doraemon as the first anime cultural ambassador in order to help people in other countries understand anime better and to deepen their interest in japanese culture.
doraemon has inspired other mangakas, such as eiichiro oda (the creator of one piece) and masashi kishimoto (the creator of naruto).
doraemon is also referred as something with the ability to satisfy all wishes and was mentioned in other successful manga like nana and gintama.
...and then there's all the icon part but you know that already.
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filmfactors · 1 year
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favorite doraemon villain?
Man, is my obvious favoritism for Suneo not enough for you guys? [I'm joking...]
Very good question though, and one that really made me take a bit to think on it. The issue with this question is that my relationship with this series solely hinges on my care for the main group, and rarely does my love extend to those outside of them. Piisuke, Fuuko, Riruru and Kebo are my exceptions but I still don't love, love them.
I feel maybe the answer should be obvious, Windmasters is my favorite of the movies so clearly Uranda [or 'evil Suneo'] has to be it right? Not really. The villains often don't matter to me, because their writing is not what I'm here for.
I mean it doesn't hurt when their actually interesting. Professor Storm, for example, isn't much but I at least can enjoy his motives. When it comes to ones like the father in Treasure Island, they often lower my opinion of the film if they are super involved.
So who is my favorite? I think I'll actually have to give it to the men in 'Nobita's Dinosaur 2006.' I do not love them as characters, I'm not searching for fanart of them but I love what they make the movie. They play a huge role in why this movie scores so high for me overall!
It's the aesthetic, the visuals, the tone. It's very different for a Doraemon movie, even among the darker ones. I think that can really make or break someones opinion of it.
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It's my favorite in terms of artwork for a Doraemon movie, no current modern movie can compare to the energy it brought. Thanks to the villains, we are granted some creepy visuals which I'm always a sucker for.
It's not just what they bringing to the vibe of the movie artistically, but I enjoy their motives and why they do the things they do. They are different from many of the other villains, I feel many of them are a sort of one-note evil. Often I feel they don't even have a reason to explain their cases to the group, exceptions aside.
These guys, well they are certainly very evil people, but it's not like the man in 'South Sea Adventure.' Who shares a similar goal as an animal trafficker in the future world. They aren't boring and drop exposition like their desperate for someone to talk to... they are genuinely slimy, and say their piece often with the intent to hurt or manipulate.
They are dinosaur hunters and traffickers who are tired of the same old hunt and ending up wanting to do something new. Which was hunt and torment children... it's a low bar, but hey they do say the most dangerous hunt of all is man.
I do often say the darkest doesn't equal better, which is true, but it feels like the right amount of evil. That their logic of 'hunting dinosaurs to children' pipeline isn't that much of a leap.
Though, if I were to pick a more traditional Doraemon villain? It's Gigazombie... uh specifically the 2016 version.
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This guy rules, and the movie is in my top five at least.
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creepfactors · 1 year
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fav doraemon movie?
Easy, it's Nobita and the Windmasters! Nobita's Dinosaur [2006] is a close second though.
I actually made an effort last year to watch and rewatch the Doraemon movies, in the process I made a ranked list on letterboxd to help me keep track.
There's still plenty I haven't seen, but some simply aren't included- like most of the older films, due to the lack of good english subs thus not really able to fully give my thoughts on them.
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albertonykus · 6 months
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Doraemon Long Stories Vol. 1: Nobita's Dinosaur
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Continuing my mission to (re)read all the Fujio-authored Doraemon works, it's time for the Doraemon Long Stories. This series was the basis for the Doraemon movies released in 1980–1997 (with the exception of The Record of Nobita's Parallel Visit to the West).
Given that I've already reviewed all the movies and they generally differ from their manga counterparts in only minor details, I was originally going to cover multiple Doraemon Long Stories volumes in each post, but I ended up having more to say about the manga than I anticipated, so I guess you're getting at least 17 more separate Doraemon posts. All of my followers are thrilled, I'm sure.
May contain spoilers below the break. My review of this story's movie adaptations can be found here.
Without a doubt, this is among the best-known Doraemon stories, and probably a sizable number of people who grew up with the franchise would name it as one of their favorites. As mentioned in my review of the movie adaptations, I generally think it's... decent. One of the reasons I'm not quite as enamored with this story as many others seem to be is the fact that it being the first attempt at a long-form Doraemon narrative really shows, not only from the perspective of the author but also for the characters.
Unlike many of the later entries in this series, the main characters don't set out with the intention of going on an adventure, and instead get stranded in the Cretaceous by accident. The story has to go the extra mile to come up with explanations for why some of Doraemon's most commonly used gadgets wouldn't solve the problem in this situation. The villains are defeated primarily through a combination of luck and plot-induced stupidity. None of these things would automatically ruin a story (tropes are tools, after all), but I've always thought the many of the later Doraemon Long Stories would integrate the adventure components in more natural and satisfying ways.
As far as differences between the manga and anime go, I was surprised by the number of "intimate" moments there were between Nobita and Shizuka in the manga. I tend to be under the impression that the anime likes to milk this element more than the manga, but neither of the movie adaptations had these scenes! Maybe the author wanted to achieve a more "theatrical" feel for this story.
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I enjoyed seeing Doraemon spend a page in the manga discussing mammal evolution in the Mesozoic. This exposition was cut out of both movie adaptations. I understand why, as it has essentially no bearing on the plot, but it's always fun to see the franchise indulge in highlighting its scientific inspirations.
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Having reread the manga, I've gained some fresh appreciation for the 2006 movie remake, as I now realize that it incorporates some components from the manga that the original movie didn't—perhaps most notably, a nice scene where Gian takes Nobita's side in a debate due to Nobita saving his life earlier. I may have been too harsh when I said that I couldn't "think of much reason" to recommend the 2006 remake over the original; the two movies may not have many major story differences, but I'd probably consider the remake a more solid movie overall for the changes it did include. That being said, I'd probably still rank the original movie above the remake as a Doraemon work just for its unique status as the first film in the franchise.
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doraemonfanclub · 2 years
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🧐 Countries Doraemon visited in the movies
👉 https://www.reddit.com/r/Doraemon/comments/vn7m35/countries_and_territories_the_doraemon_franchise/ 🙏 u/UnadamantlySmall
👉 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Doraemon_films/
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The Doraemon franchise takes place somewhere in suburban Tokyo, Japan. While some of its movie sets take place in another planet/world (2019 takes place on the Moon), they have also travelled throughout the world through its numerous movies. In order of mainline appearance, the list of places include:
1980: Nobita's Dinosaur in USA and Canada (remade in 2006)
1982: Nobita and the Haunts of Evil in Democratic Republic of Congo (remade in 2014, my personal favorite movie)
1984: Nobita's Great Adventure into the Underworld in Croatia (remade in 2007)
1988: The Record of Nobita's Parallel Visit to the West in People's Republic of China (also featured in 1989's Nobita and the Birth of Japan that would be remade in 2016. Xinjiang and Tibet were also featured in 2003's Nobita and the Windmasters)
1991: Nobita's Dorabian Nights in Iraq
1992: Nobita and the Kingdom of Clouds in Germany (also featured in 2001's Nobita and the Winged Braves)
1993: Nobita and the Tin Labyrinth in Italy
1994: Nobita's Three Visionary Swordsmen in France
1997: Nobita and the Spiral City in Slovenia
1998: Nobita's Great Adventure in the South Seas in Oceania (country not specified)
2000: Nobita and the Legend of the Sun King in Mexico (shut-out to Austria's Wiener Sängerknaben (GER: Vienna Boys' Choir) for providing the opening track for this movie)
2002: Nobita in the Robot Kingdom in Ukraine
2003: Nobita and the Windmasters in Mongolia
2004: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey in New Zealand
2010: Nobita's Great Battle of the Mermaid King in Palau2012: Nobita and the Island of Miracles—Animal Adventure in Fiji
2013: Nobita's Secret Gadget Museum in United Kingdom
2017: Nobita's Great Adventure in the Antarctic Kachi Kochi
2018: Nobita's Treasure Island in The Carribean (country not specified)
Adapted from: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Countries_where_Doraemon_visited_in_the_movies.svg#/media/File:Countries_where_Doraemon_visited_in_the_movies.svg
Note: 1983's Nobita and the Castle of Undersea Devil took place somewhere in The Atlantic Ocean. While not part of the mainline movies, the Doraemon franchise has also visited The Netherlands, Belgium, and Switzerland in 藤子不二雄スペシャル ドラえもん・ヨーロッパ鉄道の旅 (JP: Fujiko Fujio Special Doraemon: Europe Rail Travel). The Doraemons spin-off also includes characters from Spain, Russia, and Brazil. Feel free to add to this comment if there are anything else incorrect and/or missing.
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toonabby · 20 days
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Q1 (January to March) anniversary recap thread:
Here's a listed of works that celebrated their milestone anniversaries this year and people who celebrated their milestone birthdays that I missed last quarter, as well as works that released this year:
[Note that this draft was made in March 31, but I didn't have enough time to post it, hence why it's here]
1964 and earlier:
Colonel Heeza Liar's African Hunt - January 10, 1914
Gertie the Dinosaur - February 18, 1914
Colonel Heeza Liar Shipwrecked - March 14, 1914
Janet Waldo✝️(Late American voice actress known for portraying Judy Jetson from The Jetsons) - February 4, 1919
Felix Out of Luck - January 1, 1924
Ron Moody✝️(Late British actor, singer, and composer) - Born January 8, 1924
Felix Loses Out - January 15, 1924
Felix 'Hyps' the Hippo, Colonel Heeza Liar's Mysterious Case - February 1, 1924
Felix Crosses the Crooks - February 15, 1924
Felix Tries to Rest - February 29, 1924
Alice's Day at Sea - March 1, 1924
Yanky Clippers - January 21, 1929
Sick Cylinders - February 18, 1929
James Hong (Chinese-American actor known for Mr. Ping in the KFP franchise) - Born February 22, 1929
Bob Uecker (Former MLB player) - Born January 26, 1934
Barry Humphries✝️(Late Australian actor known for portraying Bruce in Finding Nemo) - Born February 17, 1934
Hamateur Night - January 28, 1939
Mickey's Surprise Party - February 18, 1939
Ferdinand the Bull - February 23, 1939
Goofy and Wilbur - March 17, 1939
Jerry Springer✝️(Late American comedian) - Born February 13, 1944
R. Lee Ermey✝️(Late American actor and Marine drill instructor) - Born March 24, 1944
Adventures of Pow Wow - January 30, 1949
Pat Farley (American voice actor for Krang, Casey Jones and Baxter Stockman in the 80's TMNT series) - Born February 18, 1949
Oprah Winfrey - Born January 29, 1954
Shigeru China (Veteran Japanese voice actor) - Born February 4, 1954
James Carter Cathcart AKA Jimmy Zoppi (Retired NY-based voice actor known for portraying James, Meowth, and Pros. Oak) - Born March 8, 1954
Clancy Brown (voice actor for Mr. Krabs) - Born January 6, 1959
Sleeping Beauty (1959) - January 29
Clutch Cargo (1959) - March 9
The Magilla Gorilla Show - January 14
Michelle Obama - Born January 17
Mika Kanai (Japanese voice actress for Vanilla H, Satoko Houjou, and Histoire) - Born March 18
1969:
Mr. Lawrence (American animator and recurring voice actor in SpongeBob SquarePants) - Born January 1
Himitsu no Ako-chan - January 6
Patton Oswalt (American comedian) - Born January 27
Lee Toker (Canadian voice actor for Bling-Bling Boy, The Roach, and Snips) - Born February 11
Paget Brewster (voice actor for Elise Pearson, Della Duck, and Judy Ken Sebben) - Born March 10
Kevin Shinick (producer of MAD) - Born March 19
1974:
Heidi, Girl of the Alps - January 6
Christian Bale (English actor beat known for portraying Batman) - January 30
Vicky the Viking - January 31
Seth Green (American voice actor for Chris Griffin and creator of/recurring voice actor for Robot Chicken) - February 8
Bagpuss - February 12
Kamen Rider X - February 16
1979:
Amigo and Friends - January 1
Julie the Wild Rose - January 4
Battle Fever J - February 3
Josh Keaton (American voice actor for Spider-Man) - February 8
Maryke Hendrikse (Canadian voice actor for Susan Test, Revy, and Gilda) - February 23
1984:
Katri, Girl of the Meadows - January 8
Kaiji Tang (LA-based voice actor for Archer, Fang, and Jinshi) - Born January 25
Cristina Miliza (voice actress for Poison Ivy, Jessica Cruz, and Charlene) - Born February 1
Choudenshi Bioman - February 4
Ian Sinclair - Born March 2
Lupin III Part III - March 3
James the Cat - March 10
Future Boy Conan and Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind - March 11
Doraemon: Nobita's Great Adventure into the Underworld - March 17
1989:
Marianne Bray (Crunchyroll English dub voice actress for Charlotte Flampe, Mia Christoph, and Ichigo Saotome) - Born February 6
Chip & Dale: Rescue Rangers, Kousoku Sentai Turboranger - March 4
Doraemon: Nobita and the Birth of Japan - March 11
Babar - March 28
1994:
Reina Ueda (Japanese voice actress) - Born January 17
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 - February 2
Where on Earth Is Carmen Sandiego? - February 5
Ninja Sentai Kakuranger - February 18
Dakota Fanning (American actress and daughter of Steve Fanning) - Born February 23
Duckman - March 5
The Busy World of Richard Scarry - March 9
Alan Ituriel (Mexican creator and voice actor for Villainous) - March 10
Doraemon: Nobita's Three Visionary Swordsmen and Dragon Ball Z: Broly - Second Coming - March 12
Super Metroid - March 19
Thumbelina - March 30
1999:
The PJs - January 10
The Brothers Flub - January 17
Super Smash Bros - January 21
Zoboomafoo and Dilbert - January 25
TNK (Japanese animation studio known for School Days and High School DxD) - January 29, 1999
A Little Curious - February 1
Power Rangers Lost Galaxy - February 6
Ojamajo Doremi - February 7
Mario Party (US) - February 8
Final Fantasy VIII - February 11
Kyuukyuu Sentai GoGoFive - February 21
Babar: King of the Elephants - February 26
Joshua David King (Africa-American voice actor and singer) - Born February 28
WonderSwan - March 4
Doraemon: Nobita Drifts in the Universe - March 6
Tarzan of the Apes - March 9
Neo Geo Pocket Color - March 16
Doug's 1st Movie - March 26
2004:
Drake & Josh - January 11
Seven Little Monsters - January 14
Vocaloid - January 15
Teacher's Pet - January 16
Whoopi's Littleburg - January 18
The Koala Brothers, Boohbah - January 19
Kamen Rider Blade - January 25
Winx Club - January 28
The Lion King 1½ - February 10
Power Rangers Dino Thunder - February 14
Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger - February 15
Clifford's Really Big Movie - February 20
Duel Masters - February 27
Tripping the Rift - March 4
Doraemon: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey - March 7
Game Over - March 10
Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed - March 26
2009:
Huntik: Secrets & Seekers, Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight - January 3
The Electric Company - January 19
Wolverine and the X-Men - January 23
Kamen Rider Decade - January 25
Olivia - January 26
Hulk Vs - January 27
RuPaul's Drag Race - February 2
Coraline - February 6
Friday the 13th remake - February 13
Samurai Sentai Shinkenger - February 15
Madea Goes to Jail - February 20
League of Super Evil - March 5
Watchmen - March 6
Doraemon: The New Record of Nobita: Spaceblazer, Power Rangers RPM - March 7
The Amazing Spiez! - March 15
Barbie Thumbelina - March 17
Pretty Cure All Stars DX - March 20
Monsters Vs. Aliens - March 27
2014:
Every Witch Way - January 1
BeyWarriors: BeyRaiderz, Space Dandy, Seitokai Yakuindomo - January 4
Noragami - January 5
D-Frag, Robot Girls Z, Super Sonic: The Animation - January 6
Numb Chucks - January 7
Engage to the Unidentified - January 8
Go! Go! 575 - January 9
No-Rin, Wake Up Girls - January 10
Nisekoi - January 11
Tesagure! Bukatsu-mono Encore - January 12
The Nut Job - January 17
Sheriff Callie's Wild West, The Idolmaster Movie: Beyond the Brilliant Future! - January 25
The Lego Movie - February 7
Barbie: The Pearl Princess, Power Rangers Super Megaforce - February 15
Ressha Sentai ToQger - February 16
Peabody and Mr. Sherman - March 7
Pretty Rhythm: All Star Selection - March 8
Cardfight!! Vanguard: Legion Mate - March 9
Nerds and Monsters - March 12
Pretty Cure All Stars New Stage 3 - March 15
Hyperdimension Neptunia Re;Birth2: SISTERS GENERATION - March 20
Muppets Most Wanted - March 21
2019:
Abby Hatcher - January 1
Dororo remake - January 7
The Rising of the Shield Hero - January 9
The Quintessential Quintuplets - January 10
Kaguya-sama: Love Is War - January 12
The Magnificent Kotobuki - January 13
Gigantosaurus - January 18
Gen:Lock - January 26
Rainbow Butterfly Unicorn Kitty - January 27
Arc of Alchemist - February 7
The Lego Movie 2 - February 8
Doom Patrol, The Umbrella Academy - February 15
Super Sentai Strongest Battle - February 17
Corn & Peg, How to Train Your Dragon: Hidden World - February 22
Tyler Perry's A Madea Family Funeral - March 1
Power Rangers Beast Morphers - March 2
DC Super Hero Girls, Captain Marve, Costume Quest - March 8
Fully Funtasia - March 11
Wonder Park - March 15
Kishiryu Sentai Ryusoulger - March 17
Pokemon the Series: Sun & Moon - Ultra Legends - March 23
Dumbo remake - March 29
Victor and Valentino - March 30
2024:
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doraemon-facts · 5 months
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Other than gadgets, Doraemon keeps a lot of mundane items in his pocket, like cutlery, tissue paper, a hose, and a kettle.
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Source: Nobita's Dinosaur, 1980 (manga, Doraemon Long Stories)
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Source: ロボットペーパー, 1976 (manga)
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Source: ばくはつこしょう, 1977 (manga)
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Source: そっくりかかし, 1981 (manga)
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Source: Nobita in the Robot Kingdom, 2002
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He also carries normal food like gum (although he told Nobita it was a gadget to trick him), lollipops, chocolate, and of course dorayaki.
Source: シャラガム, 1976 (manga)
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Source: 強力ウルトラスーパーデラックス錠, 1989 (manga)
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Source: ふんわりズッシリメーター, 1989 (manga)
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Source: 雪男のアルバイト, 1979 (manga)
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Source: The Records of Nobita, Spaceblazer, 1981 (manga, Doraemon Long Stories)
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mediasaurs · 8 months
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TRM Round 1: Doraemon: Nobita’s Dinosaur (T. rex) vs Ice Age (Momma Dino)
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Doraemon: Nobita’s Dinosaur (T. rex) – From the first feature-length Doraemon film, premiering in 1980, this dinosaur starts out as a threatening presence to Nobita and his friends. Once Doraemon manages tame it with some dumplings, however, it later saves the day when the gang are captured by time traveling dinosaur hunters.
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Ice Age (Momma Dino) – In Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, it is revealed that an underground lost world exists where non-avian dinosaurs managed to survive. Sid the sloth stumbles across a mother T. rex’s babies and tries to raise them on his own, resulting in peril, hijinks, temporary shared custody, and a heroic showdown with Rudy the deadly Baryonyx.
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