...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
Live-Action Cartoon
- 240 statements
- 46 feature instances
- 24 referencing feature instances
Live-Action Cartoon | type |
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Live-Action Cartoon | page |
LiveActionCartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon | comment |
Sometimes, a live-action TV show or movie starts doing cartoonish things, such as characters recovering from or remaining immune to something that would normally injure or kill someone, characters getting Squashed Flat, or characters engaging in over-the-top cartoon-style violence. A Live-Action Cartoon relies on tropes commonly found in zany cartoons, although some may use tropes that originate from anime, being somewhat of a live-action equivalent of Animesque. The style was itself inspired by Slapstick, which has inspired several early animated shorts. Watching old silent comedy films you'll notice a lot of elements reminiscent of Looney Tunes or other old-school animation. Not to be confused with Roger Rabbit Effect, which is when live-action or realistic human characters interact with cartoon characters. For actual live-action cartoons, see Live-Action Adaptation. |
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Live-Action Cartoon | fetched |
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Live-Action Cartoon | parsed |
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Live-Action Cartoon | processingComment |
Dropped link to RapidFireComedy: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to RunningGags: Not an Item - UNKNOWN | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | isPartOf |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_1aa9d9f4 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1aa9d9f4 | comment |
The 1960s Batman series had comic book sound effects appear on-screen during fights. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1aa9d9f4 | featureApplicability |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_1aa9d9f4 | featureConfidence |
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Batman (1966) | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1aa9d9f4 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1bd69d53 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1bd69d53 | comment |
The Adventures of Pete & Pete is built around this premise. The whole show has a cozy yet surreal feel to it like something out of a cartoon. For example, Wellsville has a resident superhero, Artie, the Strongest Man In the World, a man who, among other feats, has hit a golf ball 300,003 yards, pushed a house to the left an inch (he wanted to knock it over, but he had strained a muscle earlier while lifting a brassiere emporium), rolled a bowling ball from Wellsville to Canada, skipped a stone on Neptune, left the Wrigley family's gutters clean and spotless by blowing through the drainage pipe (albeit at the cost of said gunk going flying all over the neighborhood), and leaped across the city in a single jump. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1bd69d53 | featureApplicability |
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The Adventures of Pete & Pete | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1bd69d53 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1e1f03c7 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1e1f03c7 | comment |
Pee-wee's Playhouse takes place in a very surreal setting involving a colorful playhouse in which the titular Manchild protagonist lives. It contains talking inanimate objects to boot. Paul Reubens speaks in a wacky voice to keep the kids entertained and talks to the audience regularly. | |
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Pee-wee's Playhouse | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_1e1f03c7 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_2aaa6ba | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_2aaa6ba | comment |
The Grand Tour did one as a promo, "James May is Alive", in which May goes about his normal day while barely dodging death, including a literal Anvil on Head. After he goes to visit his co-presenters Hammond and Clarkson in hospitalnote Making fun of the fact that earlier that year, both had actually been hospitalized for a car crash and pneumonia, respectively, he gets into his car and promptly gets a dumpster dropped on it. His reaction? A deadpan "ow." | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_2aaa6ba | featureApplicability |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_2aaa6ba | featureConfidence |
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The Grand Tour | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_2aaa6ba | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_31e4963c | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_31e4963c | comment |
The Villain was designed to be a live-action cartoon western. (More specifically, a Wile E Coyote And The Roadrunner western..) | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_31e4963c | featureApplicability |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_31e4963c | featureConfidence |
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The Villain | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_31e4963c | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_3b9dab71 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_3b9dab71 | comment |
The live-action movie adaptation of Cutey Honey has animated battle sequences using pictures of the characters moving in ways and manners that are only possible in anime. The campiness and zany tone of the show is exaggerated. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_3b9dab71 | featureApplicability |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_3b9dab71 | featureConfidence |
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Cutey Honey | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_3b9dab71 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_3f4ad663 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_3f4ad663 | comment |
The '90s teen sitcom Parker Lewis Can't Lose is known for its surreal and wacky humor with weird and funny characters. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_3f4ad663 | featureApplicability |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_3f4ad663 | featureConfidence |
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Parker Lewis Can't Lose | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_3f4ad663 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_44127c7c | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_44127c7c | comment |
Power Rangers and its parent franchise Super Sentai both live on this trope, being filled with cartoonish villains and costumes and depicting fights that are more like dance battles with sparking effects than life-or-death struggles. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_44127c7c | featureApplicability |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_44127c7c | featureConfidence |
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Power Rangers (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_44127c7c | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4617a9f2 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4617a9f2 | comment |
Like its spiritual predecessor Married... with Children, the sitcom Unhappily Ever After is known for its cartoonish violence and surreal hijinks. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4617a9f2 | featureApplicability |
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Married... with Children | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4617a9f2 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4df757b9 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4df757b9 | comment |
Jiwi's Machines is full of slapstick and cartoonish Rube Goldberg devices. | |
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Joseph's Machines (Web Video) | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4df757b9 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4eb63b97 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4eb63b97 | comment |
Out of Jimmy's Head and its Pilot Movie, Re-Animated were created in this style specifically to fit in better with the rest of Cartoon Network's programming, as part of the channel's first foray into live-action. This is in addition to the show making use of the Roger Rabbit Effect as part of its premise. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4eb63b97 | featureApplicability |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_4eb63b97 | featureConfidence |
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Out of Jimmy's Head | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_4eb63b97 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_5286ec36 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_5286ec36 | comment |
Played with in Who Framed Roger Rabbit as it’s set in a world where animated characters co-exist with humans and use Toon Physics when interacting in the non-toon world. Likewise, humans can be subjected to Toon Physics themselves when in or near Toontown. Also, an in-universe variation occurs as animated features in this world are made by toons acting in front of a camera. They’re literal live-action cartoons. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_5286ec36 | featureApplicability |
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Who Framed Roger Rabbit | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_5286ec36 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_579b991b | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_579b991b | comment |
Leave It to Beaver is a downplayed example, as the adventurous tones of the plots were appropriately sitcom-oriented for their time, but in hindsight the show feels more like a concept that would have debuted in a cartoon. Having an Embarrassing Nickname of an animal is one thing, but the title character would find himself in many goofy predicaments as a result of being mislead by his friends. Such examples include getting locked in his school principal's office overnight in pursuit of a "spanking machine" (a made-up device his friend Larry said was in there) and getting stuck in a giant soup cup part of a billboard, believing there was real soup in there based on the steam coming from the cup. The show became more realistic in later seasons when Jerry Mathers had hit puberty, with episodes focusing more on Beaver outgrowing childhood toys like his electric trains and overcoming his disgust of girls (somewhat), if not about Wally going through new jobs and dates. Though some later episodes still retained their surrealism, such as "Beaver the Bunny" in which Beaver is required to walk to school in a bunny suit for the school play. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_579b991b | featureApplicability |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_579b991b | featureConfidence |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_579b991b | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_59fb8a3b | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_59fb8a3b | comment |
The Young Ones: Complete with talking animals and inanimate objects, over-the-top slapstick violence, and an abundance of irrelevant jokes and cutaways sequences (years before Family Guy!). | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_59fb8a3b | featureApplicability |
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The Young Ones | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_59fb8a3b | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_5cad8158 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_5cad8158 | comment |
Lizzie McGuire not only uses the Roger Rabbit Effect for Lizzie's animated consciousness expressing her true feelings, but also sometimes uses cartoon sound effects in its purely live-action moments. One episode involved a slapstick-laced prank pulled on Lizzie's arch-nemesis Kate where the Alpha Bitch finds live frogs in her locker and has a bucket of beans fall on her. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_62cafa4 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_62cafa4 | comment |
Mad Max: Fury Road is a rare non-comedic example. George Miller initially had intentions to make it an animated film at certain points during its insanely long pre-production cycle before finally settling on live-action. | |
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Mad Max: Fury Road | hasFeature |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_6f96cb3d | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_6f96cb3d | comment |
Sucker Punch would make another good example for this under the film category, being yet another Live-Action film that feels more like an anime than anything else, from the aesthetics — that include Sailor Fuku — and the amusing injuries the girls took and gave like nothing. | |
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Kung Fu Hustle: Everything operates somewhere between Wuxia-style Wire Fu and Toon Physics. Sing repeatedly suffers Amusing Injuries throughout the film (that he usually deserves), only to be fine in the next scene, and at one point is chased by a Cranky Landlady (who is also a martial arts master) in a scene that looks like something taken right out of a Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner short. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_72a84021 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_72a84021 | comment |
The Hitler Rants (which are parodies of clips from Downfall) frequently involve a lot of slapstick, surreal humor, and wacky characters that give the videos a very cartoonish feel. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_72a84021 | featureApplicability |
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Hitler Rants (Web Video) | hasFeature |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_76a03d90 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_76a03d90 | comment |
The Pitts. There was even an episode in which the Dumb Blonde daughter had a huge piece of pipe through her head and suffered no ill effects. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_7c4f1adb | comment |
Our Miss Brooks: A few Running Gags in early radio episodes harken to sheer zaniness. Mrs. Davis' initial love of bizarre recipes and Miss Brooks comically bad driving defy reality. A few of them would survive in the more straight-laced television episodes, at least when a Sound-to-Screen Adaptation was made of a story originally produced for the radio. For example, one morning Miss Brooks tells Mrs Davis she' can't drive her car because she left it parked in a hotel lobby (having driven it through the revolving doors). Mr. Conklin suffers from the trope in "Home Cooked Meal". At the beginning of the episode, he ends up locked in the Cafeteria freezer. He emerges covered with ice. Later on, Conklin walks into Mr. Boynton's kitchen; he's unaware that the gas hadn't been connected properly to the new stove. Mr. Conklin can't see and light's a match. Fortunately, Mr. Conklin only suffers a suit full of suit and pieces of an exploded turkey that should have been cooking in the oven. |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_80942169 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_80942169 | comment |
Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide does this in a very cheesy manner, like characters making Offscreen Teleportation, or being blown up in the face and getting their faces covered in ashes and taking Amusing Injuries of every kind. | |
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Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide | hasFeature |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Batman: The Movie had Written Sound Effects during fights just like the 1960s Batman series. | |
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Batman: The Movie | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_84bb0f7e | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_880cfa15 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_880cfa15 | comment |
Hogan's Heroes was this in the first season. The show always relied on broad humor, but as the series progressed, the humor became more subdued and sophisticated. The first season, however, really showcased considerable amounts of cartoonishly slapstick humor that the wartime sitcom could almost be offensive; such as Klink jumping out the window from his burning office, expecting to be caught in a blanket flimsily held by Newkirk and Carter, but they walk away at the exact moment Klink jumps. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_89bf8ce | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_89bf8ce | comment |
30 Rock is filled with wacky, pop-culture cutaway gags, elaborate, over-the-top set-pieces and convoluted storylines, characters that take the Flanderization ball and run with it, surreal jokes and plot points (including a character that is canonically immortal) and an overall extremely manic and fast-paced tone that pins it as one of the most joke-dense sitcoms ever made, live-action or not. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_8a345009 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_8a345009 | comment |
How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) has plenty of cartoon gags, setpieces and costumes, with cartoon storyboard artists being hired to work on the film and the set designer not wanting a single straight line on set. Add in Jim Carrey's signature antics and you get quite the Live-Action Cartoon. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_8a345009 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_8a3a1edd | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_8a3a1edd | comment |
Saved by the Bell takes a standard high school premise, and amps up the lunacy to a ridculous degree, having a quirky yet well-rounded cast, cheesey jokes and premises with its lead character regularly hatching a Zany Scheme every episode. Not surprising as the show initially aired alongside several Saturday-Morning Cartoon series. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_92ef018a | comment |
Ferris Bueller's Day Off has a very exaggerated tone, larger-than-life characters, constant fourth wall breaks, and the Born Lucky status of the titular character. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_ab42c63a | comment |
Get Smart. Not only was it like a cartoon, with its off-the-wall slapstick humor, but it even inspired one. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_b493baca | comment |
Animal House becomes this near the end when the Delta House members disrupt the parade. Examples are the band members blindly marching into the alley, Bluto showing off his pirate gymnastics moves, and the Death Car ramming the stands and knocking the spectators into the air. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_bac8c243 | comment |
The Mask manages to pull zany cartoon humor in live-action quite well. It helps that the main character is played by Jim Carrey and that it's all Justified in-universe: Said character is a fan of old cartoons like the ones by Tex Avery who gets magically empowered into a whimsical Reality Warper. (The sequel Son of the Mask also attempted to do this, with rather underwhelming results.) | |
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Henry Danger involves very cartoonish characters and events with a lot of slapstick humor. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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The two live-action Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf films, I Love Wolffy and I Love Wolffy 2, retain the slapstick comedy that defines the original series, with barely a scratch seen on the characters after Amusing Injuries. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Scott Pilgrim vs. The World is like a live-action comic book (after all, it is based off a comic book) and a cartoon, with written sound effects, text, and yelled-out lines appearing on-screen, video game elements occurring in the real world, the titular character not showing any injuries or pain from things that would normally injure someone in real life (e.g., thrown hundreds of feet into the air, thrown through walls, repeatedly kicked by stunt doubles, his head being slammed on a table), and more. | |
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Police Squad! and its spin-off movie franchise, The Naked Gun, take an ordinary Police Procedural and add silly dialogue and wacky sight gags that would not be out of line in a Tex Avery cartoon. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Crimewave: The film's raison d'être is its combination of Alfred Hitchcock Film Noir with Looney Tunes violence and physics. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Big Time Rush has very cartoonish music from Guy Moon, who is most well-known for composing music for The Fairly Oddparents. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Ronald McDonald had commercials like these, even having an opening similar to classic animated shorts like Mickey Mouse and Looney Tunes. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_ddf46a82 | comment |
The traps in the Home Alone movies are very cartoonish and get even more so in each new installment. The same applies to the other family comedies of John Hughes which also feature Amusing Injuries, Toon Physics among others. Even Roger Ebert's review of Baby's Day Out agreed that some of the humorous moments could have worked better in a Roger Rabbit & Baby Herman cartoon. | |
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1.0 | |
Home Alone | hasFeature |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Shoot 'Em Up is often described as a Darker and Grittier Bugs Bunny cartoon with gunfights galore. | |
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1.0 | |
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Shoot 'Em Up | hasFeature |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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The Three Stooges is one of the earliest and best examples, made at a time when animated cartoons themselves were still relatively new. | |
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1.0 | |
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The Three Stooges | hasFeature |
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Live-Action Cartoon / int_e6695c62 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Hudson Hawk is basically like a live-action, Americanized version of Lupin III. It has things such as using a skateboard to bypass museum security, using a fishing pole to swipe Leonardo da Vinci's artwork, and the villains coming across as a comedic rogues' gallery. | |
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Hudson Hawk | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_e6695c62 | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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LazyTown: Lead actor Stefán Karl Stefánsson is essentially the Icelandic equivalent of Jim Carrey, and his character in the show, the sneaky villain Robbie Rotten, is the closest to a living, breathing cartoon character that we'll ever get. | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_eb59224d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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LazyTown | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_eb59224d | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Speed Racer fully embraces the camp of the anime it's based on. | |
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1.0 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_ef407eb4 | featureConfidence |
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Speed Racer | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_ef407eb4 | |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_f0d6862 | type |
Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Green Acres could be considered the Trope Codifier. The series routinely made use of incredibly slapstick and outlandish situations and gags that would otherwise be implausible in the real world (characters being knocked through solid walls, or falling off telephone poles without even getting hurt, for example), not to mention that each character had such Limited Wardrobe that they literally wore the exact same outfits for all six seasons (save for Oliver and Lisa), that it could very well be the poster child for a live-action cartoon. | |
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Live-Action Cartoon | |
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Zazie dans le Métro: Most of the film, but especially the chase scene between Zazie and the creepy older man, which plays exactly like a live-action version of a Tex Avery cartoon. Zazie produces a stick of dynamite out of nowhere, and an old-fashioned bomb with a wick, both of which she flings at the pedophile. At one point she turns into two different Zazies. She shoots him in the face with a gun, and he gets Ash Face. At another point in the sequence, the pedophile is chasing her through a marketplace, when she repeatedly gets him to stop by...producing cameras out of nowhere and getting the pedophile to stop for photos. | |
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Zazie dans le Métro | hasFeature |
Live-Action Cartoon / int_f1b5a329 |
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