The Powerpuff Girls (Picture 3)
The Powerpuff Girls cartoon images gallery 3. The Powerpuff Girls cartoon pictures collection 3.
The show has a highly stylized, minimalistic visual look, reminiscent of Hanna-Barbera's previous limited animation including The Huckleberry Hound Show, Yogi Bear, and The Flintstones. In his review of The Powerpuff Girls Movie, movie critic Bob Longino of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution said that "the intricate drawings emanate 1950s futuristic pizazz like a David Hockney scenescape", and that the show is "one of the few American creations that is both gleeful pop culture and exquisite high art". The original 79 episodes were hand-drawn and produced at Rough Draft Studios in South Korea, but the 2009 special episode The Powerpuff Girls Rule!!! was animated with Adobe Flash at Cartoon Network Studios. The show's animation director was Genndy Tartakovsky (Dexter's Laboratory, Samurai Jack), who also directed many episodes himself. James L. Venable composed the opening theme of the series and Scottish band Bis performed the ending theme song, as played during the credits. The opening theme is based on the Clyde Stubblefield performed Funky drummer drum break sample. The Powerpuff Girls (Picture 3). The Powerpuff Girls cartoon images gallery 3. The Powerpuff Girls cartoon pictures collection 3. Craig McCracken, a student of the California Institute of the Arts, created The Whoopass Girls in 1992 in his short film Whoopass Stew: A Sticky Situation. Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation selected the short in 1994; McCracken submitted it to Hanna-Barbera's innovative What A Cartoon! Show shorts program (eventually to be produced for Cartoon Network as "The Powerpuff Girls in: Meat Fuzzy Lumpkins" as part of World Premiere Toons) while working on Dexter's Laboratory. Announcer Ernie Anderson, the narrator of the pilot episode, died in 1997, the year before the show became a series. "Meat Fuzzy Lumpkins" first aired in 1995, followed by a second short, "Crime 101", a year later. The Powerpuff Girls TV debut on November 18, 1998 was at the time the highest rated premiere in Cartoon Network's history. The series consistently scored the highest rating each week for the network across a wide range of demographics—from young children to adults. In October 2000, Cartoon Network credited the Powerpuff Girls for its Friday night prime time ratings win among cable networks. By 2001, merchandising based on The Powerpuff Girls encompassed everything from T-shirts, toys, and video games to lunchboxes and dishware. Concerning the Powerpuff Girls success, Craig McCracken has stated, "I thought it would get on Cartoon Network and college kids would watch it and there would be a few random T-shirts out there in the rave scene or in record shops. But I had no idea that it would take off to this extent. The Powerpuff Girls (Picture 3). The Powerpuff Girls cartoon images gallery 3. The Powerpuff Girls cartoon pictures collection 3.
The Powerpuff Girls cartoon images gallery 3. The Powerpuff Girls cartoon pictures collection 3.
The show has a highly stylized, minimalistic visual look, reminiscent of Hanna-Barbera's previous limited animation including The Huckleberry Hound Show, Yogi Bear, and The Flintstones. In his review of The Powerpuff Girls Movie, movie critic Bob Longino of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution said that "the intricate drawings emanate 1950s futuristic pizazz like a David Hockney scenescape", and that the show is "one of the few American creations that is both gleeful pop culture and exquisite high art". The original 79 episodes were hand-drawn and produced at Rough Draft Studios in South Korea, but the 2009 special episode The Powerpuff Girls Rule!!! was animated with Adobe Flash at Cartoon Network Studios. The show's animation director was Genndy Tartakovsky (Dexter's Laboratory, Samurai Jack), who also directed many episodes himself. James L. Venable composed the opening theme of the series and Scottish band Bis performed the ending theme song, as played during the credits. The opening theme is based on the Clyde Stubblefield performed Funky drummer drum break sample. The Powerpuff Girls (Picture 3). The Powerpuff Girls cartoon images gallery 3. The Powerpuff Girls cartoon pictures collection 3. Craig McCracken, a student of the California Institute of the Arts, created The Whoopass Girls in 1992 in his short film Whoopass Stew: A Sticky Situation. Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation selected the short in 1994; McCracken submitted it to Hanna-Barbera's innovative What A Cartoon! Show shorts program (eventually to be produced for Cartoon Network as "The Powerpuff Girls in: Meat Fuzzy Lumpkins" as part of World Premiere Toons) while working on Dexter's Laboratory. Announcer Ernie Anderson, the narrator of the pilot episode, died in 1997, the year before the show became a series. "Meat Fuzzy Lumpkins" first aired in 1995, followed by a second short, "Crime 101", a year later. The Powerpuff Girls TV debut on November 18, 1998 was at the time the highest rated premiere in Cartoon Network's history. The series consistently scored the highest rating each week for the network across a wide range of demographics—from young children to adults. In October 2000, Cartoon Network credited the Powerpuff Girls for its Friday night prime time ratings win among cable networks. By 2001, merchandising based on The Powerpuff Girls encompassed everything from T-shirts, toys, and video games to lunchboxes and dishware. Concerning the Powerpuff Girls success, Craig McCracken has stated, "I thought it would get on Cartoon Network and college kids would watch it and there would be a few random T-shirts out there in the rave scene or in record shops. But I had no idea that it would take off to this extent. The Powerpuff Girls (Picture 3). The Powerpuff Girls cartoon images gallery 3. The Powerpuff Girls cartoon pictures collection 3.
Labels: Powerpuff Girls
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