Watch the Pink Panther Strikes Again Online Free
| The Pink Panther | |
|---|---|
| The Pink Panther blithe graphic symbol is often used to correspond the franchise | |
| Created past | Blake Edwards Maurice Richlin |
| Original work | The Pink Panther (1963) |
| Owner | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| Years | 1963–present |
| Films and telly | |
| Film(due south) | Original serial
Reboot series
|
| Curt film(s) | See List of The Pink Panther cartoons and List of The Inspector cartoons |
| Animated series |
|
| Television special(s) |
|
| Games | |
| Video game(southward) |
|
| Audio | |
| Original music | "The Pink Panther Theme" "Meglio stasera" |
| Official website | |
| Pink Panther on Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | |
The Pink Panther is an American media franchise primarily focusing on a series of comedy-mystery films featuring an inept French police detective, Inspector Jacques Clouseau. The franchise began with the release of the archetype Pinkish Panther film in 1963. The office of Clouseau was originated by and is most closely associated with Peter Sellers. Most of the films were written and directed past Blake Edwards, with theme music equanimous by Henry Mancini. Elements and characters inspired by the films were adjusted into other media, including books, comic books, video games and animated series.
The starting time film in the series derives its name from a pink diamond that has enormous size and value. The diamond is called the "Pink Panther" because the flaw at its center, when viewed closely, is said to resemble a leaping pink panther. The phrase reappears in the title of the 4th film The Render of the Pink Panther, in which the theft of the diamond is again the center of the plot. The phrase was used for all the subsequent films in the series, even when the jewel did not figure in the plot. The jewel ultimately appeared in six of the xi films.
The first flick in the series had an animated opening sequence, created past DePatie–Freleng Enterprises, featuring "The Pink Panther Theme" by Mancini, equally well as the Pink Panther grapheme. This character, designed by Hawley Pratt and Friz Freleng, was subsequently the subject of his own series of theatrical cartoons, get-go with The Pink Phink in 1964.[ane] The cartoon serial gained its highest profile on television, aired on Sabbatum mornings as The Pink Panther Evidence.
The character was featured in the opening of every Clouseau film except A Shot in the Dark and Inspector Clouseau.
Original motion picture serial [edit]
The Pink Panther (1963) [edit]
The Pink Panther (1963), the original motion-picture show of the serial, centered on the Phantom/Sir Charles Lytton, portrayed by David Niven. Set in the ski resort of Cortina d'Ampezzo. Peter Sellers's functioning was and so popular that the resulting series was built on the Clouseau character, rather than the Phantom character. Niven'southward and Sellers'south co-stars included Capucine, Robert Wagner, and Claudia Cardinale.
A Shot in the Nighttime (1964) [edit]
A Shot in the Dark (1964) was released less than a year afterwards The Pink Panther, and was the first to feature the Clouseau character as the protagonist of the film, investigating a murder. Set in a country mansion about Paris. This motion-picture show marked the first appearance of many of the tropes and supporting characters long associated with the series, including Commissioner Dreyfus (portrayed by Herbert Lom), his assistant François (portrayed by André Maranne), and Clouseau's manservant, Cato (portrayed by Burt Kwouk). Elke Sommer, George Sanders, Graham Stark, Tracy Reed and Douglas Wilmer also appeared in the picture.
Inspector Clouseau (1968) [edit]
The 1968 film Inspector Clouseau stars Alan Arkin every bit Clouseau, and does not feature any other recurring characters from the balance of the series. Although it was produced past the Mirisch Corporation (who endemic the rights to the Pinkish Panther and Clouseau characters), cardinal people associated with the earlier films, such every bit Peter Sellers, Blake Edwards, and Henry Mancini, were not involved in the making of this motion picture.
The Return of the Pink Panther (1975) [edit]
More than a decade after his previous portrayal, Peter Sellers returned every bit Clouseau in 1975's The Return of the Pink Panther. The film marked the render of the famous "Pink Panther" diamond equally well as about of the creative squad associated with the prior films, including director Blake Edwards, composer Henry Mancini, Herbert Lom as Dreyfus, Burt Kwouk as Cato and André Maranne every bit François. David Niven did not reprise the function of Sir Charles Lytton, who is portrayed in the film past Christopher Plummer instead. The pic likewise co-starred Catherine Schell, Peter Arne, and Graham Stark.
The Pink Panther Strikes Again (1976) [edit]
In The Pink Panther Strikes Again (1976), Dreyfus' insanity reached its zenith, as he tried to blackmail the rest of the world into killing Clouseau. It co-starred Leonard Rossiter, Lesley-Anne Down, Michael Robbins, Colin Blakely, and featured an uncredited cameo by Omar Sharif.
Revenge of the Pink Panther (1978) [edit]
Revenge of the Pink Panther (1978) pitted Clouseau against the French Connexion. It is the last in which Sellers played Clouseau. He died 2 years after its release. Information technology co-starred Dyan Cannon, Robert Webber, Robert Loggia and Graham Stark.
Romance of the Pink Panther (abandoned) [edit]
Romance of the Pink Panther was to have been the 7th moving-picture show in the franchise, and written past Peter Sellers and Jim Moloney.[2] Due to a rift between Blake Edwards and Sellers, Edwards would not accept directed the film. The basic plot was to involve Inspector Clouseau becoming smitten with a cat burglar called "the Frog", played past Pamela Stephenson.[3] 2 drafts of the screenplay were written before Sellers' death, each with dissimilar endings.[ citation needed ] Soon afterwards Sellers' decease in July 1980, it was reported that Dudley Moore might play Clouseau, but Blake Edwards instead chose to introduce a new graphic symbol in the serial, rather than recast the part of Clouseau. Both Clive Donner and Sidney Poitier were reported at various times to be directing the flick, with Donner's proper name in that function on the cover sheet of the July 16, 1980 'final draft' script.
Trail of the Pink Panther (1982) [edit]
Trail of the Pink Panther (1982) was the starting time Pink Panther movie made after Peter Sellers' death in 1980. Sellers' role is created past using scenes cut from Strikes Again, as well equally flashbacks from the previous Pink Panther films. This moving-picture show was intended equally a tribute to Sellers, merely after its release, Sellers' widow Lynne Frederick successfully sued Edwards and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer for tarnishing her tardily husband'south retentivity. David Niven and Capucine reprise their original roles from the first Pink Panther film. Trail was a critical and commercial failure.
Curse of the Pinkish Panther (1983) [edit]
1983's Curse of the Pink Panther is the start to feature a different lead character, blundering American detective Sgt. Clifton Sleigh, portrayed past Ted Wass. Inspector Clouseau and the Pinkish Panther diamond, both of which had disappeared in Trail, are pursued by Sleigh. Clouseau returns, afterwards having plastic surgery to disguise his identity, in a cameo appearance past Roger Moore (who is credited every bit "Turk Thrust Two"). Although intended to spawn a new serial of misadventures for the inept Sergeant Sleigh, the film's dismal box-office performance and critical drubbing, forth with a complicated serial of lawsuits between Edwards and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, led to a decade-long hiatus of the series. The lawsuit was eventually settled out of court in 1988, effectually the time Edwards came up with 1 final moving picture idea that would ultimately become the unofficial series finale.
Son of the Pink Panther (1993) [edit]
In Son of the Pink Panther (1993), Blake Edwards made one final attempt to revive the Pink Panther series, this time by casting Italian histrion Roberto Benigni every bit Gendarme Jacques Gambrelli, Inspector Clouseau'southward illegitimate son past Maria Gambrelli, the murder suspect from A Shot in the Dark (1964). Once over again, regular Panther co-stars render – Herbert Lom, Burt Kwouk, and Graham Stark, and a star of the original 1963 film, Claudia Cardinale. Although intended to relaunch the serial with the blundering Jacques as a atomic number 82, Son failed both critically and commercially and became the final installment in the original Pinkish Panther series. It was also the final film for both retiring managing director Blake Edwards and composer Henry Mancini, who died in 1994.
Reboot film series [edit]
The Pink Panther (2006) [edit]
This reboot launches a new Pink Panther pic serial starring Steve Martin equally Inspector Clouseau and Kevin Kline every bit Main Inspector Dreyfus. Not a remake of the original film, it forms a new starting indicate for a contemporary series, introducing the Clouseau and Dreyfus characters along with the famous diamond to a new generation.
The film was panned by almost critics, but was a fiscal success, grossing $164.one 1000000 confronting an $80 million budget.
The Pink Panther 2 (2009) [edit]
The sequel to Steve Martin's 2006 motion picture. Martin reprises his role, simply John Cleese replaces Kevin Kline as Chief Inspector Dreyfus.
This movie received negative reviews and was also not equally successful at the box role equally its predecessor.
Second reboot moving picture [edit]
On March 31, 2014, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer announced plans to develop a new live-action/CGI hybrid feature film starring The Pink Panther, which was to be directed past David Silverman (of Simpsons fame) and produced by Walter Mirisch and Julie Andrews (who, in improver to her many career accomplishments, is Blake Edwards' widow). Unlike virtually previous films, this film will not exist focused on Inspector Clouseau, merely instead on the titular cartoon graphic symbol himself.[four] However, on Nov xix, 2020, a CGI animated / live-activeness hybrid Pink Panther film was officially announced with Jeff Fowler directing the feature instead of Silverman and Chris Bremner developing the script, though the film will still exist produced past Julie Andrews and Walter Mirisch and his son Lawrence Mirisch. It was besides announced that the picture show volition focus on both the Pink Panther himself and Inspector Clouseau.[five]
Development [edit]
20th-century moving-picture show series [edit]
Most of the films in the series starred Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseau and were directed and co-written by Blake Edwards. As detailed in the director'due south commentary for the beginning moving-picture show, the Inspector Clouseau grapheme was originally conceived as a vehicle for David Niven, simply in one case written it was decided he should play the raconteur/thief. Then the part was offered to Peter Ustinov, with Ava Gardner to play his married woman. When Gardner dropped out, and then did Ustinov, so the role of Clouseau went to Sellers. Apparently, the tone of the flick inverse afterward Edwards picked up Sellers from the drome, and during the ride to the hotel, they bonded over their mutual love of onetime film comedians similar Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton and Laurel & Hardy. The role was and then modified to include elements of slapstick. The jazz-based Pink Panther Theme was equanimous by Henry Mancini. In improver to the credits sequences, the theme often accompanies whatsoever suspenseful sequence in the commencement movie and in near of the subsequent films featuring the character of Clouseau.
The "Pink Panther" of the championship is a diamond supposedly containing a flaw that forms the image of a "leaping panther" which can be seen if held up to the light in a certain mode. This is explained at the beginning of the start moving-picture show, and the photographic camera zooms in on the diamond to reveal the blurry flaw, which focuses on the cartoon Panther (though not really leaping) to begin the opening credits sequence. (This is also washed in The Render of the Pinkish Panther [1975].) The plot of the kickoff film is based on the theft of this diamond. The diamond reappears in several later films in the series, The Return of the Pinkish Panther (1975), Trail of the Pink Panther (1982) and Curse of the Pink Panther (1983). Information technology also appears in the revival of the Inspector Clouseau character in the Steve Martin reboot films The Pinkish Panther (2006), and its sequel The Pink Panther 2 (2009). The proper noun "the Pink Panther" became attached to Inspector Clouseau in much the aforementioned mode that Frankenstein has been used in film titles to refer to Dr. Frankenstein's cosmos, or The Thin Human was used in a series of detective films.
A Shot in the Dark, the second picture show in the series, was non originally intended to feature Clouseau and is the beginning of 2 films in the series (the other existence Inspector Clouseau) that features neither the diamond nor the distinctive animated Pink Panther character in the opening credits and ending. Many critics, including Leonard Maltin, regard A Shot in the Dark as the best picture in the series.
In the original picture, released in 1963, the main focus was on David Niven's function as Sir Charles Litton, the infamous jewel thief nicknamed "the Phantom", and his programme to steal the Pink Panther diamond. Inspector Clouseau was only a secondary character as Litton's incompetent adversary and provided slapstick to an otherwise subtle, lighthearted caper moving picture, a somewhat jarring contrast of styles which is typical of Edwards's films. The popularity of Clouseau acquired him to become the main character in subsequent Pink Panther films, which were more straightforward slapstick comedies.
Mancini'southward theme, with variations in organisation, is used at the outset of all but the get-go two of the subsequent films. Mancini's other themes for the first film include an Italian-language fix-piece called "Meglio stasera", whose purpose seems primarily to introduce young actress Fran Jeffries. Portions of an instrumental version also appear in the flick's musical score several times. Other segments include "Shades of Sennett", a "honky-tonk" pianoforte number introducing the film's climactic hunt scene through the streets of Rome. Most of the remaining tracks on the soundtrack anthology are the early 1960s orchestral jazz pieces, matching the manner of the era. Although variations of the chief theme would reprise for many of the Pink Panther serial entries, as well as the cartoon series, Mancini composed different theme music for A Shot in the Dark; this theme was after adopted by the animated spin-off serial The Inspector.
Although official, the alive-activity film Inspector Clouseau (1968) starring Alan Arkin every bit Clouseau, is generally non considered by fans to be part of the series catechism, since it involved neither Sellers nor Edwards. However, some elements of Arkin'southward performance and costuming of Clouseau were retained when Peter Sellers resumed the function of Return in 1975. Despite speculation, Alan Arkin does not announced in Trail of the Pink Panther.
2000s picture serial [edit]
The film that launched the second Pink Panther series, The Pink Panther, starring Steve Martin as Clouseau, directed past Shawn Levy and produced by Robert Simonds, was released in February 2006 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and was co-produced with Columbia Pictures. It is fix in the nowadays twenty-four hour period and introduces different main characters, therefore belonging to a different continuity. Martin besides stars in the sequel, The Pink Panther ii, released in 2009.
Recurring characters [edit]
| Character | Moving-picture show | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Pink Panther | A Shot in the Dark | Inspector Clouseau | The Return of the Pink Panther | The Pink Panther Strikes Over again | Revenge of the Pink Panther | Trail of the Pink Panther | Curse of the Pink Panther | Son of the Pink Panther | The Pinkish Panther | The Pink Panther 2 | ||
| Inspector Jacques Clouseau | Peter Sellers | Alan Arkin | Peter Sellers | Peter Sellers (outtakes from The Pink Panther Strikes Again) | Roger Moore (cameo) | Peter Sellers Film cameo | Steve Martin | |||||
| Primary Inspector Charles Dreyfus | Herbert Lom | Herbert Lom | Kevin Kline | John Cleese | ||||||||
| Kato Fong | Burt Kwouk | Burt Kwouk | ||||||||||
| Sergeant François Chevalier/François Duval | André Maranne | André Maranne | Dermot Crowley | |||||||||
| Sir Charles Lytton/The Phantom | David Niven | Christopher Plummer | David Niven, Rich Little (voice) | |||||||||
| Professor Auguste Assurance | Harvey Korman (deleted scene) | Graham Stark | Harvey Korman (previously unseen footage) | Harvey Korman | Graham Stark | |||||||
| Simone Clouseau/Lady Simone Lytton | Capucine | Capucine | ||||||||||
| George Lytton | Robert Wagner | Robert Wagner | ||||||||||
| Hercule LaJoy | Graham Stark | Graham Stark | ||||||||||
| Maria Gambrelli | Elke Sommer | Claudia Cardinale | ||||||||||
| Gendarme Gilbert Ponton | Jean Reno | |||||||||||
| Nicole Durant | Emily Mortimer | |||||||||||
| Renard | Philip Goodwin | |||||||||||
Respons [edit]
Box part and financial operation [edit]
| Film | Release date | Box role gross | Budget | Ref. | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North America | Other territories | Worldwide | ||||||||||
| The Pink Panther | eleven Apr 1966 (1966-04-11) | $10,878,107 | Due north/A | $10,878,107 | [6] | |||||||
| A Shot in the Night | 23 June 1964 (1964-06-23) | $12,368,234 | Northward/A | $12,368,234 | [7] | |||||||
| Inspector Clouseau | 28 May 1968 (1968-05-28) | $i,900,000 | N/A | $1,900,000 | ||||||||
| The Return of the Pink Panther | 21 May 1975 (1975-05-21) | $41,833,347 | N/A | $41,833,347 | $v million | [8] | ||||||
| The Pink Panther Strikes Again | 15 December 1976 (1976-12-15) | $33,833,201 | N/A | $33,833,201 | $6 million | [ix] | ||||||
| Revenge of the Pink Panther | 19 June 1978 (1978-06-xix) | $49,579,269 | Due north/A | $49,579,269 | $12 1000000 | [10] | ||||||
| Trail of the Pink Panther | 17 December 1982 (1982-12-17) | $ix,056,073 | N/A | $ix,056,073 | $half-dozen million | [11] | ||||||
| Curse of the Pinkish Panther | 12 August 1983 (1983-08-12) | $4,491,986 | N/A | $iv,491,986 | $11 million | [12] | ||||||
| Son of the Pinkish Panther | 27 August 1993 (1993-08-27) | $2,438,031 | N/A | $2,438,031 | $28 million | [xiii] | ||||||
| Reboot series | ||||||||||||
| The Pinkish Panther | 9 February 2006 (2006-02-09) | $82,226,474 | $81,889,423 | $164,115,897 | $fourscore million | [14] | ||||||
| The Pink Panther 2 | 5 February 2009 (2009-02-05) | $35,922,978 | $40,102,156 | $76,025,134 | $70 million | [15] | ||||||
| Total | $284,527,700 | $121,991,579 | $406,519,279 | $218,000,000 | ||||||||
Recurring cast members [edit]
| Histrion | Pic | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Pink Panther | A Shot in the Night | Inspector Clouseau | The Render of the Pink Panther | The Pinkish Panther Strikes Again | Revenge of the Pinkish Panther | Trail of the Pink Panther | Expletive of the Pink Panther | Son of the Pink Panther | The Pinkish Panther | The Pink Panther 2 | |||||
| Graham Stark | Hercule LaJoy | Pepi | Bavarian Innkeeper | Prof. Auguste Balls | Hercule LaJoy | Waiter | Prof. Auguste Assurance | ||||||||
| David Lodge | Georges Duval | Mac | |||||||||||||
| Douglas Wilmer | Henri LaFarge | Police Commissioner | |||||||||||||
| Claudia Cardinale | Princess Dala | Maria Gambrelli | |||||||||||||
| Joanna Lumley | Marie Jouvet | Countess Chandra | |||||||||||||
| Robert Loggia | Al Marchione | Bruno Langois | |||||||||||||
| Peter Arne | Colonel Sharki | Colonel Bufoni | |||||||||||||
| Julie Andrews | Maid (deleted scene) | Ainsley Jarvis (singing vocalism) | Charwoman | ||||||||||||
| Eric Pohlmann | Bergesch | The Fat Human being | |||||||||||||
| Geoffrey Bayldon | Gutch | Dr. Claude Duval | |||||||||||||
| Tutte Lemkow | Kazak dancer | Frenchie LeBec | |||||||||||||
| John Bluthal | Bullheaded Ragamuffin | Guard at Cemetery | |||||||||||||
| Herb Tanney | Nice constabulary main | Norwegian assassin | Hong Kong police chief | Lugash secret policeman | Jean Claude | ||||||||||
Crew [edit]
| Pic | Producer | Manager | Screenwriter | Production Designer | Cinematographer | Editor | Composer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Pink Panther | Martin Jurow | Blake Edwards | Maurice Richlin & Blake Edwards | Fernando Carrere | Philip H. Lathrop | Ralph Due east. Winters | Henry Mancini |
| A Shot in the Dark | Blake Edwards | Blake Edwards & William Peter Blatty | Michael Stringer | Christopher Challis | |||
| Inspector Clouseau | Lewis J. Rachmil | Bud Yorkin | Tom Waldman & Frank Waldman | Arthur Ibbetson | John Victor-Smith | Ken Thorne | |
| The Render of the Pink Panther | Blake Edwards & Tony Adams | Blake Edwards | Frank Waldman & Blake Edwards | Peter Mullins | Geoffrey Unsworth | Alan Jones | Henry Mancini |
| The Pink Panther Strikes Once more | Harry Waxman | ||||||
| Revenge of the Pink Panther | Frank Waldman & Ron Clark & Blake Edwards | Ernest Day | |||||
| Trail of the Pink Panther | Frank Waldman & Tom Waldman & Blake Edwards & Geoffrey Edwards | Dick Bush | |||||
| Curse of the Pink Panther | Blake Edwards & Geoffrey Edwards | Ralph E. Winters | |||||
| Son of the Pink Panther | Blake Edwards & Madeline Sunshine & Steve Sunshine | Robert Pergament | |||||
| The Pinkish Panther | Robert Simonds | Shawn Levy | Len Blum & Steve Martin & Michael Saltzman | Lilly Kilvert | Jonathan Brown | George Folsey, Jr. | Christophe Brook |
| The Pink Panther 2 | Harald Zwart | Scott Neustadter & Michael H. Weber & Steve Martin | Rusty Smith | Denis Crossan | Julia Wong |
Statistics [edit]
| Title | Clouseau actor | Release appointment | Rotten Tomatoes | Upkeep | US/Canada gross | Worldwide gross | ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Pink Panther | Peter Sellers | Dec eighteen, 1963 | xc% | N/A | $10,878,107 | N/A | [16] |
| A Shot in the Dark | Peter Sellers | June 23, 1964 | 93% | North/A | $12,368,234 | Northward/A | [17] |
| Inspector Clouseau | Alan Arkin | February 14, 1968 | Northward/A | North/A | $i,900,000 | N/A | |
| The Return of the Pinkish Panther | Peter Sellers | May 21, 1975 | 89% | $v meg | $41,833,347 | $75,000,000 | [18] [nineteen] |
| The Pink Panther Strikes Again | Peter Sellers | Dec 15, 1976 | 83% | $half-dozen one thousand thousand | $33,833,201 | $75,000,000 | [20] [21] [22] |
| Revenge of the Pink Panther | Peter Sellers | July 19, 1978 | 78% | $12 meg | $49,579,269 | Due north/A | [23] |
| Trail of the Pink Panther | Peter Sellers (outtake footage) | December 17, 1982 | 25% | $half-dozen million | $ix,056,073 | N/A | [24] |
| Curse of the Pink Panther | Ted Wass (as Sergeant Sleigh, an American bumbling detective) | August 12, 1983 | 29% | $11 million | $4,491,986 | N/A | [25] |
| Son of the Pink Panther | Roberto Benigni (as Officer Gambrelli, Clouseau's illegitimate son) | August 27, 1993 | half dozen% | $28 million | $2,438,031 | $20,000,000 | [26] [27] |
| The Pink Panther | Steve Martin | February 10, 2006 | 21% | $eighty million | $82,226,474 | $164,115,897 | [28] |
| The Pink Panther 2 | Steve Martin | February 6, 2009 | 12% | $seventy million | $35,922,978 | $76,025,134 | [29] |
Cartoons [edit]
| | This department needs expansion. You can help by calculation to it. (September 2016) |
The opening title sequence in the original 1963 The Pink Panther motion picture was such a success with the United Artists executives that they decided to adapt the title sequence into a series of theatrical blithe shorts. DePatie–Freleng Enterprises, run past quondam Warner Bros. Cartoons creators David H. DePatie and Isadore "Friz" Freleng, produced the opening sequences, with Freleng as director. United Artists deputed a long series of The Pink Panther shorts, the first of which, 1964's The Pinkish Phink, won the 1964 Academy Award for Blithe Short Movie. This was the commencement (and to date only) time a studio'south starting time work won an Oscar.[30]
By the fall of 1969, the shorts were existence broadcast on NBC[31] during Saturday mornings on The Pink Panther Prove; after 1969, new shorts were produced for both tv circulate and theatrical release. A number of sister serial also joined the Pinkish Panther character on picture show screens and on the airwaves, including The Inspector, featuring a comical French police officer based on the Jacques Clouseau graphic symbol.
Traditionally mute, the Pink Panther was given the phonation of actor Matt Frewer for a 1993-1996 blithe Boob tube series.
The animated Pink Panther character has also appeared in computer and console video games, as well as advert campaigns for several companies, nearly notably for Owens Corning Fiberglass insulation. There was too a curt-lived animated series chosen Pink Panther and Pals (2010) which is aimed at younger children. In 2014, MGM appear (encounter above) that information technology was planning an blitheness / live-activity hybrid pic reboot of the franchise,[32] to be directed by David Silverman and produced by Walter Mirisch and Julie Andrews.[33] Only in Nov 2020, it was afterward announced that Jeff Fowler will direct the picture show instead with Mirisch and Andrews nonetheless producing. The animated Pink Panther grapheme also appeared in a brusque animated segment on the educational Goggle box series Sesame Street, demonstrating his karate skills to carve the letter Thousand out of a block of rock, only for it to crumble quickly afterward.
Encounter likewise [edit]
- "Pink Panthers", which was the name given by Interpol to a group of Montenegrin thieves who successfully executed several gem heists starting in 1993.
- 'The Pinkish Panthers', a name used for several unlike LGBT rights organizations in North America since the 1970s.
References [edit]
- ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 118–119. ISBN0-8160-3831-7 . Retrieved half-dozen June 2020.
- ^ PinkPantherMania.com, Romance of the Pink Panther - the Never Released Pink Panther Picture.
- ^ Bach, Steven (1985). Final Cut: Dreams and Disaster in the Making of Heaven's Gate . New York: New American Library. p. 262. ISBN0451400364.
- ^ "MGM To Make New Alive-Action/CG 'Pink Panther' Movie". borderline.com.
- ^ Kroll, Justin (Nov xix, 2020). "'Pink Panther': MGM Developing Alive-Action/CGI Hybrid Movie With 'Sonic The Hedgehog'south Jeff Fowler Directing". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved November 20, 2020.
- ^ "The Pink Panther (1963 film)".
- ^ "A Shot in the Dark (1964 film) - Financial Information".
- ^ "The Return of the Pink Panther - Fiscal Data".
- ^ "The Pinkish Panther Strikes Once more - Fiscal Information".
- ^ "Revenge of the Pink Panther - Financial Data".
- ^ "Trail of the Pink Panther".
- ^ "Expletive of the Pinkish Panther".
- ^ "Son of the Pink Panther".
- ^ "The Pink Panther(2006 flick)".
- ^ "The Pink Panther 2".
- ^ The Pink Panther (1963) at Box Part Mojo
- ^ A Shot in the Dark at Box Function Mojo
- ^ The Render of the Pinkish Panther at Box Office Mojo
- ^ "The Pink Panther Strikes Again (advertising)". Variety. Dec 22, 1976. p. ix.
- ^ The Pinkish Panther Strikes Again at Box Part Mojo
- ^ "UA Film Rental Highlights of 1977". Variety. January 11, 1978. p. 3.
- ^ "New 'Pink Panther,' Prepare For July Bow, Tops $vii-Mil in Blind Bids". Variety. March 22, 1978. p. 39.
- ^ Revenge of the Pink Panther at Box Role Mojo
- ^ Trail of the Pink Panther at Box Office Mojo
- ^ Curse of the Pink Panther at Box Office Mojo
- ^ Son of the Pink Panther at Box Role Mojo
- ^ Groves, Don (Nov 14, 1994). "'Lion King' conquers French B.O.". Diverseness. p. xiv.
made $18 million [in Italy]
- ^ The Pink Panther (2006) at Box Office Mojo
- ^ The Pink Panther two at Box Office Mojo
- ^ "The Pink Phink." www.bcdb.com, Apr thirteen, 2013.
- ^ "The Pink Panther Show." www.bcdb.com, April 14, 2014.
- ^ George Wales (2 April 2014). "Pink Panther getting blithe reboot". Full Film . Retrieved 30 September 2014.
- ^ Koch, Dave (April 14, 2014). "Pink Turns 50! Let's Celebrate!". Big Cartoon News. Archived from the original on April 15, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
External links [edit]
- The Pink Panther via Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's website
-
Quotations related to The Pink Panther at Wikiquote
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pink_Panther
0 Response to "Watch the Pink Panther Strikes Again Online Free"
إرسال تعليق