Big Ear (1989)
Genre : Animation, Comedy, Family, Science Fiction
Runtime : 10M
Director : Yuriy Butyrin
Synopsis
An alien falls down from the sky in front of a wolf cub. His big ear allows him to listen to everything that happens in the universe. Yet somehow he fails to hear forest creatures calling for help.
Jerry's eccentric uncle, Pecos, a Texan mouse, comes to spend the night with him before his musical performance on television the next day. He decides to rehearse with his guitar for the performance but each time he plays, one of his guitar strings snaps off. Fortunately, he is able to replace them by plucking off one of Tom's whiskers each time. Tom is rather reluctant about this and tries to hide to protect his whiskers from Uncle Pecos.
The couple that owns Tom and Spike decides they can't afford to keep both. They agree that the first one to catch the mouse can stay - bad news for Jerry.
Agent Coulson stops at a convenience store and deals with a coincidental robbery during his visit.
A buddha-like figure meditating on a high platform is fussily scrutinized by a whirring, clicking, mechanical bureaucrat.
In eight minutes, animator Bill Plympton gives us 24 vignettes: seven are clearly about sex, 10 about violence, and seven others deal with human frailties, particularly the body as it ages. There are three stories of persons with confused priorities (including a guy tying his shoe while parachuting); the world's first phone sex; and a clever, if dangerous, way to find a lost key. Except for the titles of each sketch and a couple of jokes that turn on noise, these are visual trips into the psyche of men, women, God, animals, and Time (the enemy of us all).
Silent Rain in the Ninth is an honest character study illustrating the essential nature of an addicted horserace gambler in one of his days at the track...
A hungry babysitter gets creative when faced with no decent food to eat.
A man with a truck full of meat attempts to sell his wares in a trailer park.
Time winds backward through a series of vignettes, tracing through the fate of a reckless baroness and two men who fight to possess her.
At the home of Viennese composer Johann Strauss lived Johann Mouse. Whenever the composer played his waltzes, the mouse would dance to the music, unable to control himself. One day, when Strauss was away, the house cat played his master's music. When word got out about a piano-playing cat and a dancing mouse, they were commanded to perform for the emperor.
To his surprise, a street-wise biker is seduced by a beautiful woman in a sports-car.
"My favourite Things" is a short film created by students at the University of Leeds.
A nurturing farmer in is danger of losing his crop of windmills when he struggles against the cyclical forces of nature.
An unknown virus has destroyed almost the entire human population. Oblivious to the true nature of the disease, the only remaining survivors escape to the sea. In great ships, they set off in search of uninhabited land. So begins the exodus, led by one man ...
Papiroflexia (Spanish for “Origami”) is the animated tale of Fred, a chubby man with a passion for paper folding, who wants to change the world with his art.
The continuation of the adventures of Fyodor and his friends from the Prostokvashino village.
A third movie about Fyodor and his friends from the Prostokvashino village and their adventures - this time during the winter.
A comic mystery about Vasia Kurolesov who is trying to become a detective.
The history of the chihuahua told by a chihuahua in cartoon form. Bonus content on the Beverly Hills Chihuahua disk.
Porky Pig spends the night at an Irish castle after being caught in a storm, and gets in trouble with the two leprechauns who live there.