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6.4/10
1.4 हज़ार
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अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA girl named Holly, who lives with her piggish relatives, has a series of fun adventures with her friends, a group of zany talking dogs called the Pound Puppies.A girl named Holly, who lives with her piggish relatives, has a series of fun adventures with her friends, a group of zany talking dogs called the Pound Puppies.A girl named Holly, who lives with her piggish relatives, has a series of fun adventures with her friends, a group of zany talking dogs called the Pound Puppies.
- पुरस्कार
- कुल 1 नामांकन
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फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
There was a previous comment about there being a different movie before This movie. There is a movie before this one. It does take place in a big city dog pound. It has Ed Begley Jr and Joanna Worley and Jonathan Winters in it, but none of them had it in their filmography lists. The movie isn't in the Database. Several voices sound like other famous people. We looked at the opening credits and Sorrell Brooke, famous for playing Boss Hogg on Dukes of Hazard, plays the Mayor. We didn't notice any other names that became famous later. The movie is just called "Pound Puppies" It has on the box that it's their first adventure. My wife has the VHS tape and still enjoys watching it with my sons.
I used to really like this show when I was....well, I was a kid but I was probably too old for cartoons even in 1986. Thankfully, the cartoon wasn't in the just-for-girls vein the toy line was, so I guess I can salvage SOME dignity ;) There's a movie missing from the database, I've noticed. The original Pound Puppies movie, NOT the Legend of Big Paw (which is in the IMDb database). It has most of the characters that were on the TV series, with some differences. Bright Eyes is actually intelligent (and if I'm not mistaken, is voiced by the same talent that provides the voice for "Bratina" in the TV series). Nose Marie is simply called The Nose and has a thick New York accent instead of being a southern belle. And the story takes place at the City Pound instead of the rather benign-looking suburban setting of the TV show.
I watched this show as a child and now only as an adult with the knowledge of Joan Crawford's life as Mommie Dearest do I get the humor of this show, with that horrible mother -- Mommie Dearest -- and her horrible child, Bratina! I don't remember anything about the puppies but the sound of Bratina crying, "But Mommie Dearest" still rings in my ears years later. What a riot.
I remember this was one of my favorite shows as a kid. My mother and I use to sit in her bed together watching this show. This show had good morals to it. There was nothing better than the comforting viewing each time of the friendship the characters shared. It's a lot better than some of the cartoon series they have on now for kids. I highly recommend this for the young children of today.
Pound Puppies is from long before I was born, but I was lucky enough to see reruns of it on Boomerang as a kid. I'd watch it before school every morning back then, and I was devastated when it was taken off the air. Now all the episodes are on YouTube, so I can revisit the show! I like the 2010 Pound Puppies series too, but it's not as good as this one.
Cooler, Howler, Bright Eyes, Whopper, Nose Marie, and their owner Holly all live and work together at Holly's Puppy Pound. They do the best they can to find loving masters for puppies and kittens who have no homes. As goofy as the Pound Puppies are, they constantly face serious problems, and they always show kindness and tenderness to those who are outcasts like them, which proves that they're capable of giving outcasts the love and acceptance they and Holly wish they had. Heartwarming, right? This also proves that they aren't willing to force their problems onto others or make other animals' (or humans') lives miserable. Unfortunately, there are lots of cats and dogs who run wild and don't have a home or anybody to love them, feed them, and play with them, and the Pound Puppies do everything they can to fix problems like that.
The 3 main villains, Katrina and Brattina Stoneheart and their cat named Catgut, try to kill the Pound Puppies and make their lives miserable all the time, but thankfully they always lose in the end and receive their comeuppance.
The show has good morals like the value of friendship, sometimes giving is better than receiving, chores don't have to be boring, you can be anything, just because something feels too good to be true doesn't always mean it is, and more. This is one of the cartoons I've seen that most effectively shows the importance of friendship and compassion alongside the Winnie the Pooh franchise. Why? It's because of the kindness and tenderness they always show their fellow outcasts that I mentioned earlier.
Cooler has always been one of my favorite characters and the highlight of the show, mainly because of his laugh. It's so funny and not like any other laugh I've heard before! I heard that his laugh is based on Eddie Murphy's laugh. He's a laidback guy and a surrogate big brother to his fellow Pound Puppies. Sure, he can be goofy and a jokester at times, but he can also be serious when the Pound Puppies are in a tough situation, and he always manages to stay calm.
Various references to other cartoons are present. There's an episode where Cooler says Elmer Fudd's catchphrase, "Be vewy vewy quiet, I'm hunting wabbits." Coincidentally, I used to imitate both Cooler and Elmer Fudd's laughs all the time. There's also a Mount Rushmore parody in another episode. It's just like the real deal, except it has the heads of other Hanna Barbera dogs on it (Scooby Doo, Muttley, Huckleberry Hound, and Doggie Daddy) instead of presidents. How awesome is that!
I highly recommend Pound Puppies to both the young and old. If you love puppies and kittens like me, you'll probably love this show!
Cooler, Howler, Bright Eyes, Whopper, Nose Marie, and their owner Holly all live and work together at Holly's Puppy Pound. They do the best they can to find loving masters for puppies and kittens who have no homes. As goofy as the Pound Puppies are, they constantly face serious problems, and they always show kindness and tenderness to those who are outcasts like them, which proves that they're capable of giving outcasts the love and acceptance they and Holly wish they had. Heartwarming, right? This also proves that they aren't willing to force their problems onto others or make other animals' (or humans') lives miserable. Unfortunately, there are lots of cats and dogs who run wild and don't have a home or anybody to love them, feed them, and play with them, and the Pound Puppies do everything they can to fix problems like that.
The 3 main villains, Katrina and Brattina Stoneheart and their cat named Catgut, try to kill the Pound Puppies and make their lives miserable all the time, but thankfully they always lose in the end and receive their comeuppance.
The show has good morals like the value of friendship, sometimes giving is better than receiving, chores don't have to be boring, you can be anything, just because something feels too good to be true doesn't always mean it is, and more. This is one of the cartoons I've seen that most effectively shows the importance of friendship and compassion alongside the Winnie the Pooh franchise. Why? It's because of the kindness and tenderness they always show their fellow outcasts that I mentioned earlier.
Cooler has always been one of my favorite characters and the highlight of the show, mainly because of his laugh. It's so funny and not like any other laugh I've heard before! I heard that his laugh is based on Eddie Murphy's laugh. He's a laidback guy and a surrogate big brother to his fellow Pound Puppies. Sure, he can be goofy and a jokester at times, but he can also be serious when the Pound Puppies are in a tough situation, and he always manages to stay calm.
Various references to other cartoons are present. There's an episode where Cooler says Elmer Fudd's catchphrase, "Be vewy vewy quiet, I'm hunting wabbits." Coincidentally, I used to imitate both Cooler and Elmer Fudd's laughs all the time. There's also a Mount Rushmore parody in another episode. It's just like the real deal, except it has the heads of other Hanna Barbera dogs on it (Scooby Doo, Muttley, Huckleberry Hound, and Doggie Daddy) instead of presidents. How awesome is that!
I highly recommend Pound Puppies to both the young and old. If you love puppies and kittens like me, you'll probably love this show!
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाCooler's laugh was inspired by Eddie Murphy's laugh.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटDuring Season 1's title sequence, the Pound Puppies logo is shown and zooms out. During the same sequence, Cooler, Whopper, Bright Eyes, Nose Marie, and Howler are introduced and they bowed. Whopper is then chased by Katrina and Brattina and inaudibly tells the others that he was chased by a monster. In his thought bubble, the monster is revealed as Catgut and Bright Eyes is scared and runs to Holly. As Katrina, Brattina, and Catgut inch closer, Cooler backs at them and frightens them away. Nose Marie is seen wheeling a bunch of flowers with the Pound Puppies Logo, which irises out to Howler, whose record-like derby irises out to all the Pound Puppies who sang the lyrics to the end of the Pound Puppies theme song.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in I Love the '80s: 1985 (2002)
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- How many seasons does Pound Puppies have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
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