
- PINK PANTHER PINKADELIC PURSUIT GAME PC
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Clip Show: "Pink-In" and "Pinkologist" mostly consist of footage from previous episodes with filler animation in between the clips. The Panther himself, in the episodes where he's not a trickster, is always being being bedeviled by the universe as a whole. The Little Man is either this or The Chew Toy, in every short in which he appears. It stalks the Pink Panther around and beats up the Panther anytime he does something to the small green asterisk interfering with his Pink Punch ad campaign. The Brute: The big green asterisk from "Pink Punch". Be the Ball: Happens to the Little Man in In The Pink because of a parallel bars exercise gone wrong: he overspins and curls up into a ball, the Panther picks him up due to mistaking him for a ball and proceeds to play some basketball, but thankfully he misses a shot at a hoop which causes the Little Man to end up in the trash back to normal. Leonardo gets so mad by the constant interfering that he gives the Pisa Tower a kick. Pink can't stand that and improves the art. Who for whatever reasons draws Mona Lisa with a big frown. Been There, Shaped History: A double whammy when the Panther visits Leonardo da Vinci. Asshole Victim: Several episodes feature the Panther ruining the day of someone who, thankfully, is generally revealed to be a jerk beforehand. Beginning with the animated shorts, he would evolve into the slender, bipedal cartoon animal we all know today. Art Evolution: In his first appearance, he looks more anatomically like a real panther. And whenever the Panther tries to get even with it, a large, green asterisk (implied to be its parent) appears to defend it. The asterisk comes alive and antagonizes the Panther, first by turning green to ruin the logo's pink color scheme, then by stepping outside and messing with his work. Anthropomorphic Typography: In "Pink Punch", the logo for the Panther's titular health drink has the dot in the I stylized as an asterisk. As The '70s progressed, the various Pink Panther anthology shows came to include other DePatie-Freleng shorts. This particular setup persisted via syndicated airings and (later) Cartoon Network for years. PINK PANTHER PINKADELIC PURSUIT GAME TV
Animated Anthology: When the animated shorts began airing on Saturday morning TV in 1969 as The Pink Panther Show, it was in a half-hour timeslot and an ABA format: two Pink Panther shorts and an Inspector short. Angry Guard Dog: The Pink Panther has encountered and attempted to evade quite a few, such as in "The Pink Package Plot," "Pink Press" and "Spark Plug Pink.". Pink Panther cartoons with their own pages: PINK PANTHER PINKADELIC PURSUIT GAME PC
Pink Panther: Pinkadelic Pursuit (2002) PlayStation, Game Boy Advance, PC.Pink Panther: Hokus Pokus Pink (1998) PC, Sequel to Passport to Peril.Pink Panther's Passport to Peril (1996) PC.Pink Goes to Hollywood (1993) SNES, Genesis.Pink Panther (1988) Amiga, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, MSX.The character also starred in a few video games. A Very Pink Christmas was a 2011 half-hour Christmas Special.Pink Panther and Pals ran in 2010 on Cartoon Network.The New Pink Panther Show ran in syndication from 1993-95, and thus far is the only incarnation that gave the Panther a proper voice at all times, provided by Matt Frewer the Little Man was also voiced full-time here ( Wallace Shawn doing the work there), and many of the other DePatie-Freleng characters- the Ant and the Aardvark (both reprised by John Byner), the Inspector, and the Dogfather- appeared too, alongside both the Panther and new characters like Voodoo Man.Despite getting top billing the show focused mainly on the adventures of the Panther's two children, Pinky and Panky and their friends, the Rainbow Panthers. The Pink Panther and Sons, a co-production between Hanna-Barbera and DePatie-Freleng, aired in The '80s.ABC aired three half-hour animated specials over 1978-81: A Pink Christmas, Olym-pinks, and Pink at First Sight.After that, he became the focus of new, TV-only productions.
Even after the shorts were made specifically for television, they were still released to theaters in the early 1980s. The Pink Panther is notable as the last great theatrical shorts character, with shorts that ran through The Dark Age of Animation all the way up through 1977, a decade or more after Disney and Looney Tunes and all the other great theatrical cartoon studios had gone out of business.