Popular boy cartoons: 10 Best Cartoon Boy Characters of All Time—and How to Draw Your Own

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10 Best Cartoon Boy Characters of All Time—and How to Draw Your Own

Some say that cartoons are just for kids, but when you look at the vast array of animated shows airing today, it’s clear: cartoons are for everyone. We explore some of the best, most iconic boy cartoon characters below—then show you how you can create your own cartoon boy. 

10 Best Cartoon Boys

1. Johnny Bravo 

Source: Fandom.com

Johnny Bravo is the title character of the animated series Johnny Bravo, which is known for its adult humor and pop culture references. The character design of Johnny Bravo—including his dark sunglasses and voluminous hair—is loosely based on Elvis Presley. 

2. Arthur

Source: Wikipedia
Arthur Read, star of Arthur, is an eight-year-old aardvark. 

The star of a book series and animated cartoon, Arthur Read is an eight-year-old aardvark. The cartoon premiered in 1996 and went on to broadcast 246 episodes about dealing with important family and health issues.  

3. Stewie Griffin 

Source: Fandom,com
Stewie Griffin is a toddler-age cartoon boy with a big personality.

A main character in the adult animated series Family Guy, Stewie Griffin is a little boy cartoon with a big personality. Fun fact: Stewie is the only character that appears in every episode. 

4. Bart Simpson

Source: Wikipedia
Ten-year-old Bart Simpson stars on The Simpsons. 

Bart Simpson is a well-recognized cartoon boy—known for his rebelliousness, mischievousness, and catchphrases like “Don’t have a cow, man!”

5. Charlie Brown 

Source: Wikipedia
Charlie Brown starred in the comic strip Peanuts. 

An iconic and instantly recognizable cartoon boy, Charlie Brown first appeared in the comic strip Peanuts. Since then, he’s appeared in a number of short and full-length animations

6. Robot Boy

Source: Fandom,com
When activated, Robotboy can talk, fly, and fight.  

Robot Boy, Cartoon Network’s animated children’s series, stars a robot character aptly named Robotboy. He has three modes: deactivated (not able to walk or talk), activated (can talk, fly, and fight), and superactivated (can use weapons, like lasers and cannons). 

7. Tommy Pickles

Source: Fandom.com
Tommy Pickles in his signature blue t-shirt and diaper. 

The lovable leader of the Rugrats crew, Tommy Pickles is an inquisitive and adventurous one-year-old cartoon boy. Wearing his signature blue t-shirt and diaper, Tommy often gets himself—and his toddler friends—into memorable situations. 

8. Phineas Flynn

Source: Fandom,com
Phineas Flynn is one of two boy cartoon characters that start on Phineas and Ferb. 

One of the title characters of the animated series Phineas and Ferb, Phineas Flynn is constantly trying to avoid boredom during summer vacation. Phineas has a striking and unique character design, with a sharp, triangular head and big, round eyes.  

9. Jimmy Neutron 

Source: Wikipedia
Cartoon boy genius Jimmy Neutron

Jimmy Neutron isn’t only known for his spectacularly tall hair, but also his ridiculously high IQ. Unlike most of the characters on this list, Jimmy Neutron is a 3D (rather than 2D) animated character. 

10. Fred Flinstone 

Source: Fandom,com
Fred Flinstone coined the catchphrase “Yabba dabba doo!” 

One of the most recognizable boy cartoon characters, Fred Flinstone is known as a bowling aficionado, a loving husband and father, and the originator of the catchphrase, “Yabba dabba doo!”  

How to Create Your Own Cartoon Boy: 3 Classes

1. How to Draw Cartoon Caricature Fast and Easy

A cartoon caricature is a drawing based on a photo. 

Want to learn how to draw a cartoon boy that looks like you or someone you know? In this class, you’ll learn how to create cartoon caricatures based on a photo. The lessons walk through how to draw a cartoon boy step by step, from the head shape to the facial features, then explore character details, like how to draw cartoon boy hair and beards.  

2. Introduction to Cartoon Character Design

Several young boy characters dressed as pirates. 

This course guides you through the process of character design from start to finish. You’ll start by gathering inspiration for your character, move on to creating a rough sketch, then learn how to refine the details of the drawing. At a higher level, you’ll learn what constitutes a memorable, expressive cartoon boy. 

3. Character Design Crash Course: Designing Kids

Certain qualities, like big eyes and soft round features, can make a cartoon character look young. 

This class focuses on how to draw cartoon boys of all ages, from newborns to young adults. You’ll learn tricks for how to age a character up or down, the qualities in kids that make them look young, and which qualities you can exaggerate through cartooning. 

Have an idea of the boy character you want to illustrate? Follow these tips to bring that little guy to life.

Who knows? Maybe you’ll create the next iconic boy cartoon character. Jump in and see where character design can take you. 

Design Characters Like the Ones You See on TV 

Introduction to Cartoon Character Design

Take the Class!

Boys Best Cartoons — IMDb

by kbd710
| created — 25 Dec 2017
| updated — 25 Dec 2017
|

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11. 11.21.31.41.51.61.71.81.92.02.12.22.32.42.52.62.72.82.93.03.13.23.33.43.53.63.73.83.94.04.14.24.34.44.54.64.74.84.95.05.15.25.35.45.55.65.75.85.96.06.16.26.36.46.56.66.76.86.97.07.17.27.37.47.57.67.77.87.98.08.18.28.38.48.58.68.78.88.99.09.19.29.39.49.59.69.79.89.910
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Best Cartoon Characters in TV History

Media Platforms Design Team

1 of 32

The 33 Best Cartoon Men in TV History

It seems silly to say, but we will: A man watches cartoons. Not watched. Watches. He watches for nostalgia. Or to appease his kid. Or because they’re made for him and not the kid (which is why a good many nowadays air after bedtime). No matter the reason, cartoons have informed how nearly all of us live — with their bravery, good-heartedness, or even downright stupidity. And so here we’ve picked our favorite 33 men — loosely defined to include boys and male-gendered creatures and robots — in television cartoons, and explained why we think they’re the best.

Though first, a quick note: The goal was to be as comprehensive as we could. But we also knew that that was a foolish goal, that there’d be no way that we could ever include everyone. So if there’s anyone missing, please make your case in the comments. We’d love to hear them.

Anyway, on with the show…

Media Platforms Design Team

2 of 32

Butt-Head, Beavis and Butt-Head

Until I was about 12, other kids would call me Butt-Head, probably because I had brown hair and braces, laughed at everything, and my best friend and constant sidekick was blond and overactive. Now I don’t mind the comparison. Butt-Head was in many ways the more genial and intelligent and less annoying of the duo. He really did laugh at everything. And he had the last laugh. What seemed at the time like a lot of dumb jokes on a dumb show about cultural ephemera has become, twenty years later, eerily similar to the crap people tweet and laugh about every day while watching reality TV. Butt-Head showed us the way.

—Paul Schrodt

Media Platforms Design Team

3 of 32

Archer, Archer

The premise for Archer — a spy comedy with lilting unnatural animation — isn’t particularly promising, but the resulting show is nearly perfect. With H. Jon Benjamin, Judy Greer, and Jessica Walter in the cast, Archer has the all-star lineup of voice-over actors to deadpan its hilariously black breed of comedy, with Hitler clone Kreiger and choking-enthusiast Cheryl complementing Archer and his viciously selfish mother. But at the show’s center is Archer himself — narcissistic to the point of obliviousness, so attentive to his clothes that he makes sure to change into a black turtleneck before assassinations, connoisseur of which cocktails to drink after losing pints of blood, and quite willing to watch porn while talking to his mother at the same time. His ringtone is a song called «Mulatto Butts.» Which sort of says it all.

—Stephen Marche

Media Platforms Design Team

4 of 32

Fred Flintstone, The Flintstones

«Gee, Fred…» his best pal Barney’s refrain echoes, years later. If there was ever any lovable synthesis of the dumb male who done good, it would be the flawed Mr. Flintstone. When he got off the clock at the rock quarry, his cravings were simple: bowling massive helpings of roast porkasaurus, time spent with his darling wife Wilma, time spent away from his darling wife Wilma (by my assessment they fought at least 1.38 times an episode), and alcohol (at the Loyal Order of Water Buffalos Lodge, of course). Without Fred you wouldn’t have Homer. Hell, you wouldn’t have primetime animated series, period.

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

5 of 32

Batman, The Animated Series: Batman

Generally, the widespread cultural understanding of superheroes is determined cinematically. Christopher Reeves set the Superman tone for the next three decades. No one but the comic readers knew who Hawkeye was before Joss Whedon’s Avengers came out — why should they? Batman: The Animated Series is the exception. Yeah, it started off as a tie-in to the Burton movies, but it arguably presents a better-rounded version of the character because it ran for over serialized 100 episodes, and it was the first television version of the character that wasn’t a rehash of the Adam West formula. For the first time in a long time, Batman was a bone-breaking bastard on a TV show rife with humor and gravitas in equal parts. Narratively, its mature psychological themes (see «Dreams in Darkness» or any of the other Emmy-winning episodes) earned it acclaim and made it the gold standard for dark superhero shows. And technically, the show’s individually scored episodes, gorgeous painted backgrounds and title cards, and even Batman’s bloody face in the pilot set it apart from everything else around in the early ’90s, meaning every other show had to try to top it. In that sense, Batman accomplished more for superhero TV in its first season than any other show of the last two decades. And who can argue with Mark Hamill getting a post-Star Wars career out of it?
—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

6 of 32

Boo-Boo Bear, Yogi Bear

He’s a righteous cub stuck with a cuddly-wuddly name that undermines his intelligence, as well as his status as the voice of reason in a world gone mad with pic-a-nic basket greed. Well, world: really we mean Yogi Bear, who technically is Boo-Boo’s world. He spends each day rising in the morning, putting on his snappy bow tie, then hanging out with Yogi for the rest of his waking hours, voicing his concerns, repeatedly, about Yogi’s life of food-stealing crime. Yet this loyal, gentle-voiced soldier continues to act as the accomplice, unwittingly finding himself in situations that drive Ranger Smith completely nuts. Boo-Boo is way too smart for this life. It’s obvious that he should ditch Yogi, leave the confines of Jellystone Park and start a career as a life coach or, perhaps, a designer who sells quirky bow ties on Etsy. But he won’t, because Boo-Boo is the Jesse Pinkman to Yogi Bear’s Walter White. He’s Boo-Boo, bitch.

—Jen Chaney

Media Platforms Design Team

7 of 32

The Freeman Men, The Boondocks

What can be said about The Boondocks that Huey, Riley, and Granddad haven’t said more eloquently already? It’s impossible to choose the best man on the show because they’re so different and yet dependent upon each other. Some of Huey’s most political diatribes often come out when he’s either calling out his Granddad or fighting with his brother (or when he’s saving one of them from Uncle Ruckus’s latest racist plot). The ageless Granddad would be wisdom personified if he wasn’t so concerned with what the neighbors thought. Riley’s younger than Huey, a thug, and in many ways more interesting than either of them because we’re watching him learn that criminality and gangsta culture isn’t always productive. Does The Boondocks represent an accurate portrayal of what black people feel in America? No. But it offers a hilarious counterpoint, often with truth and nuance. Also: Kung fu.

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

8 of 32

Chris Griffin, Family Guy

On a show with so few sympathetic characters, run by a pretty unsympathetic person, that’s suffered from more formulaic decay than perhaps any show of its sub-genre, it’s really, really hard being the largely witless middle-child son. Chris Griffin, because of his weight, age, parenthood, and the Evil Monkey hiding in his closet, is portrayed as an immature buffoon. But while most of the characters flaunt their iniquities for all to see, Chris manages to stay naive and — shockingly — to still love his father after much torment. He might be the only man on the show you feel something for.

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

9 of 32

Bender and Fry, Futurama

«Eat my shorts» is so much lamer than «Bite my shiny metal ass,» it’s a shame that Futurama‘s Bender wasn’t the first Bender on screen. And he may be the most consistently likable character on the show, but you need Fry to balance out Bender. Fry’s got the best heart on the show’s crew of misfits, and from the first episode he’s been put through the wringer constantly, adapting to 31st-century life incredibly quickly. Bender wants to drink, smoke, and possesses «swarthy Latin charm» (having been built in Mexico). Their dynamic on Futurama was wonderful: Bender kept Fry on his «Do Not Kill» list, and Fry’s wanted a robot for a friend since he was six. Meant to be.

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

10 of 32

Carl Brutananadilewski, Aqua Teen Hunger Force

That Carl Brutananadilewski is considered a stereotype on all men by his creator and voice, Dave Willis, is pretty unsettling. After all, the tormented neighbor of Master Shake, Frylock, and Meatwad is a loud, lewd, obnoxious, fat, unkempt, hairy, and ignorant bald man who wears sweat pants everywhere and loves sports, pornography, and Lover Boy. Wait. Shit. That last part is pretty accurate. Well, hopefully none of us were forced to eat carpet swatches for Christmas dinner.

—Matthew Kitchen

Media Platforms Design Team

11 of 32

Goliath, Gargoyles

Everything great about Game of Thrones was bound up in a single cartoon character almost 20 years ago. For but a single season of Gargoyles, Goliath lived in a castle, overpowered all kinds of challengers like The Hound, flew like a dragon, and led his crew as honorably and stubbornly as Ned Stark. But he never lost his head, his castle was on top of a fking skyscraper in Manhattan, and I don’t even know how they kept the sound booth from exploding as Keith David boomed through Goliath’s lines. Just watch the opening theme and try not to say the same exact thing as this guy on YouTube: «‘Now the spell is broken and we live agaiiiiin!!!’ F*CK YEAAAAAAH!!!!»

—Mike Nizza

Media Platforms Design Team

12 of 32

Dudley Do-Right, Rocky and Bullwinkle

Dudley Do-Right, Canadian Mountie and «lonely defender of justice and fair play,» effectively defined the childhood understanding of the hero archetype: he’s brave and daring with a strong chin, chivalrous, well-spoken, and will do anything to stop Snidely Whiplash, an arrogant sociopath hell-bent on tying women to railroad tracks. But unlike most famous heroes, no one grows up wanting to be a Dudley Do-Right. Because sure, he means well, but as a dimwitted naïve idealist, his name, like his nationality, has become a lasting pejorative. We may all aspire to do good, but none of us want to be a do-gooder. It just seems like more fun to be Batman.

—Matthew Kitchen

Media Platforms Design Team

13 of 32

Finn the Human, Adventure Time

The cool kids in your life (as in, offspring and office interns) watch Adventure Time. Because while a hero’s journey is nothing new, the show’s imagination is unparalleled, while it still has an old-school ethos at the show’s core: the kindness of Finn the human. Finn maintains a personal code to help anyone in need — whether you’re a half-rainbow/half-unicorn, a princess made of fire or a pie-throwing robot. The high road may lead to occasional danger, but it wouldn’t be a true adventure any other way.

—Nathan Mattise

Media Platforms Design Team

14 of 32

Mr. Fischoeder, Bob’s Burgers

Plenty of “at least we have each other” families exist on TV, though none are as charming as The Belchers. One moment they run the best greasy burger place in town, the next they reunite mannequin-turned-men with their mannequin wives. Among the beneficiaries is eccentric real estate mogul Calvin Fischoeder. The Belchers posed as his family, and Bob cooked Fischoeder the meal of his life — a world-changing burger called the Meatsiah. Thankfully, Fischoeder epitomizes graciousness. How else do you explain this summer-suit-wearing Daddy Warbucks-type singing about elephant love for a Belcher kid science project?

—Nathan Mattise

Media Platforms Design Team

15 of 32

Honorary Claymation Man: Orel, Moral Orel

Most of us associate claymation with the worlds of Wallace and Gromit, Bob the Builder, and Gumby. But Moral Orel isn’t for your three-year-old — it’s not a fun show, by any measure. And yet whether we’re watching Orel get beaten with the business end of his father’s belt, or regurgitate (often made-up) dogma, or see his parents accidentally swap his younger brother with another child and ignore the fact, it somehow manages to be funny, if only in the absurdity of it all. But it’s never fun, and it’s never fair to 12-year-old Orel — the same way the path to maturity wasn’t always fair to you, but always worth it nonetheless.

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

16 of 32

Fred Jones, Scooby Doo

Of the Scooby Doo gang, Scooby and Shaggy were always the major players — and we can certainly see why. Scooby’s comedic timing and trouble with annunciation was impeccable, and Shaggy’s masterful delivery of before-his-time stoner humor (even if it was schticky from time to time) made each mystery entertaining, even if the plots were redundant. But of course, a man should not take any cues from Scoobs or Shaggy… ever. Fred, the gang’s leader, is clearly the choice for today’s man. He’s a leader. He’s calm under ghastly situations. His haircut is well-trimmed, above the ears. And his fashion sense is simple, yet classic and elegant. It’s this sensibility that makes Fred one of the more polished ‘toon examples of modern manhood.

—Mike Ayers

Media Platforms Design Team

17 of 32

Kenny McCormick, South Park

I’ll say it: With apologies to the Springfield-faithful, South Park has taken the throne. No show makes transitioning from immigration-commentary to fart jokes look so easy while remaining as damn funny as South Park. Somehow, it’s as topical and relevant as it was in 1997. There’s been a constant through it all: the resiliency of one Kenny McCormick. Through five seasons, not only did he navigate a tough economy and an overweight bully… but Kenny died at least 70 times only to continually bounce back. He was dead for nearly all of season six and didn’t even let that stop him. Tough work week? At least you didn’t deal with those bastards.

—Nathan Mattise

Media Platforms Design Team

18 of 32

Bugs Bunny, Looney Tunes

In the Looney Tunes world, we learned a lot about the uses of dynamite, shotguns to the face, talking pigs, and high-maintenance ducks. But the show’s most iconic figure, Bugs Bunny, has the ability to transcend the rabbit world, where we can see one standout quality that a man should own. It’s all about how he chews those damn carrots — and the cool confidence that he exuded. But deep down, we all knew how prized this sustenance always was. For a rabbit, a carrot, by rule, will always be better than some grass. But Bugs played it off like a champ, always acting as if a carrot was no big deal, that they were as plentiful as a field of clover. In other words: he was well aware of the humble-brag before the humble-brag existed — and more importantly, the toxic effects those would have on his character.

—Mike Ayers

Media Platforms Design Team

19 of 32

Linus Van Pelt, Peanuts

Linus Van Pelt is a man of faith. We don’t mean religious faith, although the kid does know his Bible verses, especially when he needs to make a point about the true meaning of Christmas. But perhaps more importantly, Linus believes in himself, his friends, and his dreams. He’s the rock in horizontal stripes, the kid insecure enough to carry around a security blanket but secure enough not to care if people judge him for it. He’s the friend to Charlie Brown who, above all others, is reliable and true, steadfast through Christmas tree controversies and Thanksgiving meals of popcorn, pretzel sticks, buttered toast, and jelly beans. Linus’s faith in the most questionable mythological holiday figure ever, the Great Pumpkin, scarcely wavers, even when he’s berated by his sister, slapped with Sally Brown lawsuit threats and questioned by Charlie Brown — Charlie Brown, of all people — the round-headed kid Linus has supported through years of missed football kicks and Little Redheaded Girl angst. Still, like the Red Sox fan who stuck it out through decades of a Bambino curse, Linus doesn’t stop believing. In fact, at this very moment, in a pumpkin patch that’s very sincere, Linus Van Pelt can probably be found still waiting for that Greatness, with patience, resolve, and a hope that no one can break.

—Jen Chaney

Media Platforms Design Team

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Dr. Katz, Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist

The idea that comedians are just working through their psychological shit on stage is kind of cliché now, maybe because of how seamlessly the material transitioned from the nightclub to the couch of Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist. When compared to Frasier’s constant need to lift up society with his drive-time radio advice, Katz’s mmhm’s and sure’s in the face of a comedian’s superficial ramblings actually made a more comforting and more realistic depiction of therapy. And that Katz’s mild-manner mediocrity didn’t need to overshadow his patients, or really even be that funny to be enjoyed, was unique to the genius of the show and the man behind it.

—Matthew Kitchen

Media Platforms Design Team

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Sideshow Bob, The Simpsons

When The Simpsons subverted the idea of a kids cartoon, they doubled down with Krusty the Klown, a spent, cynical Borscht-Belt hack doomed to spend the rest of his days prancing inanely for passels of braying children. Krusty’s job would be intolerable had he not the power to install someone beneath him to endure even worse serial torment. That was Sideshow Bob. Like all Simpsons side characters, Bob, voiced by Kelsey Grammar, was dual-use: an engine of hilarious slapstick and an embodiment of mass culture’s tendency to steamroll refinement, education, and taste without even noticing. In the end, Bob gathered the will to rise up against his captors — Krusty, children, the cosmos, etc. — and was repaid with even more humiliation.

—Joe Keohane

Media Platforms Design Team

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The Critic

Admittedly, the best part of The Critic wasn’t its central character, but its ability to shred through movie tropes with an economy that Family Guy‘s non-sequitur squad could learn from. But without the disdainfully delightful Jay Sherman and his unabashed cynicism for the movies he flayed, we wouldn’t have any of the 24 episodes of this flawed, fantastic show. Sherman was mentally unhinged, brave (or foolish) enough to go after vengeful Jean Claude Van Damme parody characters, and had a broken family — a constantly pestering ex-wife, a son who got picked on, and a hot new girlfriend in season 2 — and Jon Lovitz voiced him! You could call it the ultimate early ’90s show, which is probably why we all quickly forgot it.

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

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Hank Hill, King of the Hill

Hank Hill is no fool. In the Simpsons-dominated world of adult cartoons, the thing that sets him apart might be that he’s so doggone normal. He has a young son who sometimes cries, a wife who sometimes nags, friends with whom he drinks, people he doesn’t particularly like, and prejudices many of us aren’t comfortable admitting. In the episode «Westie Side Story,» he and his new Laotian neighbor Kahn first meet and don’t get along, largely because of perceived cultural differences (and misunderstandings) regarding the cooking of dog. Because King of the Hill is King of the Hill, the treatment was nuanced enough to show prejudices on both sides and absurd enough to show that neither of them mattered. The episode ends with them bonding over how they discipline their kids, which makes weirdly sense when they arrived at the conclusion after commanding each other to «Go to your room!» in a shouting match. King of the Hill in many ways represents an ideal of Texan values: steadiness, moderate conservatism, and making sure you and yours are OK. Hank’s not perfect, but was your dad?

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

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J. Wellington Wimpy, Popeye

Before Jughead Jones, Fred Flintstone, Norville “Shaggy” Rogers, and Eric Cartman, there was J. Wellington Wimpy — the First Foodie of Cartoons. (Technically, sandwich-fiend Dagwood Bumstead came a year earlier, in 1930. But isn’t it enough that he got to marry Blondie?) It’s just too bad Popeye’s notoriously-cheapskate, hamburger-addicted buddy wasn’t around for the recent burger renaissance. His derby hat would’ve gone spinning over Shake Shack.

—Sean Manning

Media Platforms Design Team

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Quailman, Doug

To make this list, he honestly doesn’t need any qualification other than this: No other man here has a name that, to be pronounced correctly, you need to say man four times in a row. But of course there was something deeper to Quailman, too: He represented both every kid’s desire to escape as well as the poorly awesomely outfitted hero in all of us, if only life would give us the chance.

—Nate Hopper

Media Platforms Design Team

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Stoop Kid, Hey Arnold!

People can be sons of bitches for different reasons. Like for revenge. Or in a completely different way: because they feel so deeply inferior and outcast and unsafe that they have no other way to respond to a world that bastardized them. Through Stoop Kid, we saw all of that range. We saw the «good» Arnold become the bully, only to then begin to understand Stoop Kid and decide to help him. And then finally, we see Harold running away as Stoop Kid, freed of his fear, chases him down for being the worst kind of son of a bitch: the one who does it to exact his false superiority. There may never have been a more nuanced portrayal of the lonely life of a reluctant bully.

—Nate Hopper

Media Platforms Design Team

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Jack, Samurai Jack

Remember samurai? Ninjas? Magic swords and evil wizards and robots? Time travel?! Samurai Jack, Genndy Tartakovsky’s masterpiece, has it all in excess with extra helpings of world folklore to boot. With its extreme close-ups of Jack’s eyebrows as he screamed before dashing at a foe, sword swinging in the wind, it wore its influences on its sleeve but managed to be so consistently original it hurt. And despite being time-displaced, Jack felt natural — navigating a post-apocalyptic future populated by oil-spewing robots and cybernetic Scots as if he’d been living there his whole life. Tartakovsky made it all look easy, which is always the hardest thing to do.

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

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Superman, Superman

Before «It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s Superman» crossed the public’s lips, there was another iconic representation of the first character superhero — an animated one, one dedicated to «Truth, Justice, and the American way,» or whatever that meant in the 1940s, anyway. That was Fleischer Studios’ take on the Man of Steel — one that was so good it’s still an influence in how animators create motion and fluidity between their drawings. It also gave us a nice snapshot of Clark Kent and Lois Lane. Lois is the go-getting reporter where Kent stayed on the sidelines. If you ignored the intro to the first one produced, you wouldn’t know it to be a Superman show until 6 minutes into a 10-minute episode. But you do, because he’s larger than life, because he looks like how Superman should look, because he moves like he should move, and it’s so unashamedly earnest because that’s what Superman should be. I mean fk, why couldn’t Zach Snyder just have played re-runs?

—Eric Vilas-Boas

Media Platforms Design Team

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Brock Samson, The Venture Bros.

Amid the chaos of the Johnny Quest-inspired world in The Venture Bros., Brock Samson stands as a testament to efficiency. He listens to Zeppelin, takes an honest approach with women, and focuses solely on his car and family — that is, when he’s not rampaging the world to hunt The Guild of Calamitous Intent. Still, Samson does that with only a knife and a moral code. Observe this cartoon rule of thumb: anything voiced by Patrick Warburton is worth the time.

—Nathan Mattise

Media Platforms Design Team

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The Tick, The Tick

«City, it is I: the Tick! Your destined defender. Show me where it hurts.» Jumping from rooftop to rooftop while narrating his own exploits like the square boxes of a comic, the Tick is a nearly invincible super-strong mass who doesn’t need an alter ego, doesn’t consider his blue attire a «costume,» and is happy to eat lunch at the counter and take a cab now and then. He’s either the product of reading too many comics or of taking too many blows to the head. Maybe both. But the satirical superhero’s earnest, if not misguided, need to patrol The City as its blue beacon of justice is only outmatched by his enthusiasm. He might also just be insane. “Spooooon!”

—Matthew Kitchen

These Are the Most Popular Kids’ TV Shows in America Right Now

Entertainment

We don’t make the rules.

by Fatherly

Updated: 

Originally Published: 

Viacom CBS

Thanks to the proliferation of cable channels and streaming services, there are more kids’ TV shows around today than ever before. Long gone are the days when Sesame Street and Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood were the most popular kids’ shows on TV simply because they were the only kids’ shows on TV. Don’t get us wrong—those PBS classics are still popular kids’ shows—but there’s a lot more competition nowadays for kids who’ve outgrown the best TV shows for toddlers.

With so many more options today—the selection of kids’ shows on Netflix alone would take days of marathon viewing to get through— what kids are actually watching is a more difficult question. To help parents keep up with their kids, we put together a list of the most popular kids’ cartoons and live-action shows right now, the titles you’ll be hearing about whether you like it or not. We’ve included which subscription-based streaming services you can find them on along with the channel-based websites you can log into with your TV provider credentials (i.e. without any extra charges for subscribers). They’re also often available to rent or purchase from online video stores like iTunes, Google Play, and Amazon Video.

Editor’s note: This list was compiled using data from Parrot Analytics, Google Trends, and independent research. It is changing and evolving.

PAW Patrol

A group of super talented canines running around Canada solving problems? What’s not to like? A lot actually, but that’s not the point. The faster you make peace with these kids’ cartoon characters and their adventures, the better.

Available to stream on CBS All Access and Nick Jr.

SpongeBob Squarepants

Entering its third decade, this nautical nonsense is as popular as ever. Multiple generations of kids have now grown up with the silly tales of a sea sponge who works as a fry cook, and they’re better for it.

Available to stream on Paramount+ and Nick.

Sesame Street

Sesame Street may have sold its soul to HBO and Apple TV+, but that doesn’t mean we don’t still love Big Bird. Even if the show isn’t quite like what it was — and has waaaay too much Elmo — that doesn’t mean it’s not still sweet. This one, you can sit through, and yes, children still like muppets as much as you did.

Available to stream on HBO Max and PBS Kids.

Peppa Pig

Peppa Pig might perpetuate terrible parental stereotypes (Daddy Pig is pretty much a full-on idiot) but, overall, the show isn’t negative. For the most part, Peppa herself is an upbeat character who doesn’t really let shit get her down. Her little brother George wines a lot, but it’s not that bad. Sometimes, occasionally, the dry British wit works. (Pro tip: Try to pretend like the narrator is Michael Caine. It makes the whole thing way better.)

Available to stream on Paramount+ and Nick Jr.

Steven Universe

This Cartoon Network stalwart has been hanging around on lists like this for a long time. You probably haven’t really thought about it too much, but because the series is about a guy who hangs out with talking crystal gems who shape-shift, the show has sort of limitless potential to make all kinds of kids happy. Don’t call it a gem just because there are talking gems, but … oh … well … you get it.

Available to stream on Hulu, HBO Max, and Cartoon Network.

Tumble Leaf

There’s not enough stop motion animation out there, which is why this title is such a welcome presence. It features a blue fox and his caterpillar friend teaching basic science concepts to kids in the grand tradition of Magic School Bus and 321 Contact. Also, unlike a lot of kids TV characters, Fig and Maple don’t complain constantly, but instead, say “Let me figure this out.” It’s impossible to always turn a bendy straw into a means of transportation via swamp bubbles, but hey, this isn’t the worst way to think about the world.

Available to stream on Amazon Prime Video.

Pete the Cat

Every day is an adventure for Pete the Cat, and each episode documents a journey of self-discovery. It’s also the only kids’ TV show with original music from Diana Krall and Elvis freakin’ Costello, who also star as Pete’s parents. Again. The music does not suck, which is certainly the exception for kids’ TV shows. The series is based on a series of children’s picture books of the same name, but honestly, the books have nothing in common with the show. Funny thing: Children don’t seem to mind the canonical inconsistency between the books and the show. They seem to like both!

Available to stream on Amazon Prime Video.

This article was originally published on

The 38 Best Cartoons of All Time

Warner Bros.Getty Images

If you always wished you had your very own Pikachu as a kid or could visit SpongeBob in his pineapple under the sea, you’re not alone. Whether it was after-school reruns or a weekend ritual with your siblings, watching cartoons has always been part of the fun of being a kid. With a cereal bowl in hand on a Saturday morning, you probably watched hour after hour until your parents yelled at you to go outside.

While some cartoons, especially from the late 1980s onward, include decidedly adult humor, others are social commentaries on a specific era. But they all take us on a trip into the imagination, where animals talk and characters bounce back, no matter what calamities (or monsters!) they confront. Most of us have a favorite from the old classics like Popeye and Road runner to the new classics such as The Simpsons, which incredibly is in its 31st season. Maybe you’ve even introduced your own kids to the old-school cartoons because so many characters such as Foghorn Leghorn or Yogi Bear transcend the test of time thanks to the animators and legendary voice actors, such as Mel Blanc and Daws Butler, who immortalized these characters.

In case you’re looking for a quick laugh or a bit of nostalgia, here’s a look at the most popular cartoons through the decades:

LMPCGetty Images

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Mickey Mouse

No list of cartoon characters would be complete without including Mickey Mouse, who made his debut in the 1928 cartoon Steamboat Willie. Having endured for generations, Mickey has starred in numerous shorts, a number of TV series and 11 feature-length films to date.

WATCH ON DISNEY+

MGM StudiosGetty Images

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Popeye the Sailor Man

The tough-guy, wise-cracking sailor, who always had a can of spinach handy, was created by Elzie Crisler Segar, a cartoonist who introduced the character in his 1929 newspaper cartoon strip, Thimble Theatre. Popeye and his pals, Olive Oyl, Bluto, Wimpy and Swee’pea, were the stars of cartoon shorts in the 1930s and early 1940s (he was even a member of the U.S. Navy during World War II), as well as numerous comic books, a TV series from 1960 to 1962, and a 1980 Popeye movie starring Robin Williams.

WATCH ON HBO MAX

Warner Brothers

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Porky Pig

First introduced in 1935, the lovable pig starred in hundreds of films in the late 1930s. Often a sidekick, he had his own show from 1964 to 1967. He was voiced by Mel Blanc, who did the voiceovers for hundreds of animated characters from the 1930s until his death in late 1980s.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Warner Brothers

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Bugs Bunny

Created in 1938, Bugs Bunny is part of a whole stable of Looney Tunes characters that dominated the Golden Age of animation in America from the years 1928 to 1960. The wascally wabbit managed to outsmart Elmer Fudd for decades and remains one of the most popular cartoon characters of all time.

WATCH ON HBO MAX

Warner Brothers

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Tom and Jerry

Created in 1940, the two rival characters, Tom (a cat) and Jerry (a mouse), first appeared in a series of shorts for MGM. The two rarely speak, although Tom sings in an early episode, and there are various sound effects. The cartoon has continued in many different incarnations to this present day in various TV shows, shorts and movies including Tom and Jerry: The Movie, released in 2021.

WATCH ON HBO MAX

Universal Television/Walter Lantz Productions

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Woody Woodpecker and Friends

First appearing in 1940, Woody and his pals were featured in an amazing 286 episodes until 1972. Whether or not you are a fan, you can’t forget his goofy laugh!

WATCH ON AMAZON

Warner Brothers

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Foghorn Leghorn

Starring in only 28 cartoons from 1946 to 1963, Foghorn Leghorn had personality plus. His distinctive Southern accent and body language along with his memorable quotes («Go, I say, go away boy. You bother me.»), became part of every day speech. He actually was inspired by a character on The Fred Allen Show, a popular 1930s and 1940s radio show.

WATCH ON AMAZON

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Alvin and the Chipmunks

Actor/songwriter Ross Bagdasarian, Sr., who specialized in writing novelty songs, created The Chipmunk Song in 1958. The record shot to the top of the charts, sending its “stars” Simon, Theodore and Alvin to the top too. (It actually won two Grammys!) A string of successful records led to a short-lived TV series in 1962 and another more successful run from 1983 to 1990.

Hanna Barbera

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Huckleberry Hound

First appearing in 1958, Huckleberry Hound is a bluetick coonhound with a Southern accent, who works through a series of unsuccessful jobs. Be he always maintains his cool and ends up on top. The show, which aired until 1962, was the first animated show to win an Emmy. Huckleberry has made sporadic appearances through the years in other cartoons ranging from The Simpsons to Animaniacs.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Hanna Barbera

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Quick Draw McGraw

This white horse in a red cowboy hat had his own series from 1959 to 1961. He often plays a sheriff in the Old West and is accompanied by his deputy, a burro named Baba Looey.

ABC Photo ArchivesGetty Images

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Rocky and Bullwinkle

From 1959 to 1964, Rocky, the flying squirrel, and Bullwinkle, the moose, had to outsmart two Cold War-era spies, Natasha and Boris. The series was one of the first to appeal to both kids and adults for its wry humor and clever cultural satire. A live action movie in 2000 got lukewarm reviews.

WATCH ON AMAZON

ABC Photo ArchivesGetty Images

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The Flintstones

From 1960 to 1966, America followed the Flintstones as they navigated the ups and downs of Stone Age life. The show was the first animated series to hold a primetime spot on TV. The series also spun off two lackluster movies, The Flintstones (1994) and The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas (2000), that weren’t well-received.

WATCH ON HBO MAX

Hanna Barbera

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Yogi Bear

Yogi actually made his debut on Huckleberry Hound in 1958 but earned his own animated series in 1961. From then until 1988, Yogi and his sidekick, Boo-Boo, attempted to steal plenty of “pic-a-nic” baskets, generally making Mr. Ranger’s life difficult. Yogi also starred in his own 2010 feature film.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Hanna Barbera

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Snagglepuss

Although it only ran for two seasons from 1961 to 1962, Snagglepuss is a memorable character. The pink mountain lion is known for his catchy exclamations such as “Heavens to Murgatroyd” and “Exit, stage left.”

WATCH ON AMAZON

Warner Bros.Getty Images

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The Jetsons

This futuristic family shot to fame during its 1962 to 1963 run. New episodes were created from 1985 to 1987, and the show ran in syndication on Saturday mornings for decades. And what kid didn’t daydream of a robot maid or a spaceship after watching? There was also a 1990 feature film.

WATCH ON HBO MAX

Hanna Barbera

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Josie and the Pussycats

Originally a teen-focused comic book series written from 1963 to 1982, the characters got their own animated Saturday morning show from 1970 to 1973. As difficult as it is to believe, there was also a Josie and the Pussycats movie, which was released in 2001 to dismal reviews.

WATCH ON HBO MAX

Leonardo/Total Television

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Underdog

From 1964 to 1967, this series aired on Saturday mornings. The cape-wearing, masked superhero dog almost always spoke in rhymes. His most famous saying: “There’s no need to fear. Underdog is here!”

ABC/CBS/Chuck Jones/Warner Brothers

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The Road Runner

In this popular show, a determined coyote tries a number of increasingly complex gadgets (often mail-ordered from the Acme Company) in his attempts to capture the smart and speedy road runner. Before airing from1966 to 1973, the show’s characters actually debuted in a 1949 theatrical cartoon.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Filmation/National Periodical

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Aquaman

Aquaman debuted in comic books in the 1940s, but he didn’t get his own animated series until 1967 to 1970. Able to breathe on both sea and land, he fought evil everywhere. Aquaman also appeared in his own feature film in 2018.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Depatie-Freleng/The Mirisch Corp/NBC

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The Pink Panther

Presented on Saturday mornings from 1969 to 1978, Pink Panther was a rosey-colored cat with aristocratic manners. The series went through a number of changes, but it often included two shorts featuring the Pink Panther, and one featuring the Inspector, modeled after the Peter Seller’s Inspector Clouseau character from the 1963 movie of the same title.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Hanna Barbera

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The Addams Family

Running for one season in 1973, the animated series was a reboot of the TV series that originally ran from 1964 to 1966. This series focused on the family’s cross-country journey in their camper.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Hanna Barbera

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Scooby Doo, Where Are You?

From 1969 to 1970, this animated show chronicled the adventures of teenage sleuths and their Great Dane, Scooby Doo, over 25 episodes. The gang solved a variety of mysteries involving monsters and other supernatural beings. A series of spin-off movies and shows continue to this day. Side note: Did you know DJ Casey Kasem was the original voice of Shaggy?

WATCH ON HBO MAX

Hanna Barbera

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The Pebbles and Bam Bam Show

In 1971, the teenaged kids of the Flintstones and the Rubbles got their own spinoff animated series. Though it wasn’t as popular as the original program, it aired until 1975.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Hanna Barbera

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Valley of the Dinosaurs

Debuting in 1975, this animated series followed a family who got lost on a rafting trip down the Amazon. They find themselves in, you guessed it, a valley filled with prehistoric creatures. Although the premise was interesting, it never gathered steam and only aired for one season.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Disney

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DuckTales

Running from 1987 to 1990, this cartoon featured Uncle Scrooge McDuck and his three nephews, Huey, Dewey and Louie. The triplets first appeared in print cartoons in 1937. The series was rebooted in 2017-21.

WATCH ON DISNEY+

Murakami Wolf Swenson/Fred Wolf Films/Mirage Studios

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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

From 1987 to 1996, absolutely everyone knew about these ninjitsu-trained turtle brothers who protected New York City from evil. Named after Renaissance artists, Donatello, Raphael, Leonardo and Michelangelo, they captured the attention of both kids and adults. Movies and video games followed.

WATCH ON AMAZON

FOX

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The Simpsons

Since 1989 to the present, this Fox series has parodied American life through the eyes of its title family. Although some critics say the quality declined after the late 1990s, The Simpsons is now the longest-running American animated series.

WATCH ON DISNEY+

Nicklelodeon

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Doug

Doug followed the adventures of an 11-year-old sixth grader who wrote about it in his journal. The series ran from 1991 to 1994, and though it wasn’t long-lived, it was one of Nickelodeon’s first original cartoon series.

WATCH ON DISNEY+

Nicklelodeon

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Rugrats

Debuting as the second Nickelodeon cartoon, Rugrats ran from 1991 to 2006, and followed the adventures of four toddlers and their older cousin. The series won numerous Emmys and even earned a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

WATCH ON HULU

Nicklelodeon

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Ren & Stimpy

This series, which ran from 1991 to 1996, followed the friendship and shenanigans of Ren, a hyperactive Chihuahua, and Stimpy, a not-too-bright cat. There’s a lot of lowbrow humor that helped it develop a cult following among teens for its shock value.

WATCH ON AMAZON

Best Currently Airing Kids’ Cartoons, Ranked

Currently, children’s animated series are still running strong with a wide variety of shows that are not only entertaining to children, but might be a great option for adults as well, depending on the series. While it may be hard to decide what to play on the television or computer screen with so many options, there are some that are more worth it than others.

RELATED: 10 Cartoons We Thought We Loved Until We Binged Them On Streaming

With the young demographic in mind, some of the best cartoon creators are making history with original ideas, incredible animation, and the best currently airing series. Hopefully, at least most of these shows will continue to entertain kids for years to come.

10 Teen Titans Go! Isn’t Too Bad When Taken Out Of Context

In spite of most fans of the 2005 series Teen Titans maintaining their frustrations with the parody spin-off, Teen Titans Go! has lasted a full 7 seasons. Critics might have their negative comments, but there are still plenty of viewers who feel differently. There are even fans who admit that the series has a fair amount of hearty laughs.

The issue that the fans of the original series take with Teen Titans Go! is how their favorite characters were turned into jokes, but that is the whole point of the series. Since it is a parody, the details and lore of the original Teen Titans don’t apply as much. There’s both good and bad with this humorous cartoon once you move past the characters and plot’s original context.

9 Victor & Valentino Is Thrilling For Fans Of The Supernatural

When the series was announced in 2019, viewers were excited about Victor and Valentino, however, that excitement turned into mixed reviews after its release. Some praise it for its great animation and portrayal of Mesoamerican culture, while others put it down for its poor execution, though not everyone agrees on that.

RELATED: The 5 Strongest (& 5 Weakest) Magic Users In Cartoons

The series follows two brothers who are constantly in trouble with supernatural monsters, all taken from Mesoamerican folklore. Many compare it to Gravity Falls and Steven Universe, for good and bad reasons, but it’s an exciting show for those who love the supernatural.

8 The Casagrandes Is A Beloved Spin-Off Series

After The Loud House’s success, Nickelodeon decided to release the spin-off The Casagrandes, following Ronnie Anne’s daily life after she and her family moved to the big city. Fans love the spin-off for its similarities to The Loud House, from the wild humor to the wholesome family moments.

There’s a lot to love in this well-thought-out series, from the fleshed-out characters to the endless originality in the plotlines. It’s also refreshing to see how well the writers handled the representation of a Latinx family with great care and treated the characters like real people.

7 The Ghost & Molly McGee Offers So Much After Only One Season

Although only 10 episodes have aired on the Disney Channel, The Ghost and Molly McGee is shaping up to be a fantastic series that blends slice-of-life with the supernatural. The show pulls the audience in with gorgeous animation and a unique art style, and intrigues them with original lore and a promising plot.

The story opens with the ghost Scratch being reviewed on his performance at keeping his town miserable to appease the ghosts’ dark lord. Scratch has kept Brighton at its most miserable state, but his afterlife is turned upside down when he meets Molly McGee, who is not only unafraid of him but sparks an unlikely friendship that raises the town’s joy. Fans enthusiastically wait for the series’ next season and have fallen in love with the plot, characters, and representation for not only the Asian community but the Jewish community as well.

6 The Loud House Reflects The Relatable Chaos That Is Family

Looking like it came straight out of a classic newspaper comic, fans fell in love with The Loud House’s animation and art style, but even more than that, this cartoon has provided a lovable cast with refreshingly original ideas. The series follows a boy named Lincoln as he goes through his daily life trying to make it past his large family’s antics—it’s not easy being the only boy in a family of ten sisters.

As fun and entertaining as the series is, it also has a lot of heart, building the relationships between the siblings so well it’ll feel like watching one’s own family. The individual characters are also a treat as each of them is unique with their own quirks, talents, and flaws. The proper representation for the LGBTQ+ community is also a plus.

5 Big City Greens’ Lighthearted Stories About Family Are Perfect For Any Age

At first glance, some viewers were skeptical of the series Big City Greens, but after giving the series some time even the naysayers have joined with the fans falling in love with this show. Big City Greens might not offer lore or a layered plot, but there is still a lot to gain from this wholesome show.

Both children and parents alike are entertained by the hilarious comedy and the lighthearted emphasis on family. Although the plot is simple in nature, being about a country family who goes to live in the big city, it’s one of those shows viewers can rely on after a long day. Many fans even consider it a PG version of The Simpsons, which would explain why adults enjoy watching it as well.

4 SpongeBob SquarePants Might Have Changed But It Still Brings Laughter To Children

Although the viewership has changed greatly with the original viewers now scorning the show, SpongeBob SquarePants still remains one of the most popular cartoons today. The characters, humor, and overall vibe of the show have certainly changed, but it hasn’t failed to entertain this generation of younger viewers.

This generation might not know anything about the older SpongeBob episodes, but these newly aired episodes are just outrageously hilarious enough to keep them laughing and wanting more. To be fair, SpongeBob has always had the most lovable characters and, for the most part, their personalities are still fairly the same as they were back in the early 2000s.

3 Craig Of The Creek Will Bring Out Your Inner Child

While so many cartoons rely on the most outrageous events, Craig of the Creek follows a different journey for its main characters. The series is all about the main trio and their misadventures in their town’s local creek. From exploring the woodlands to babysitting younger children, the show is a wholesome reminder of what it’s like to be a kid.

Although some may gripe with how simple the plotlines are, even going as far as to call it boring, it’s all up to taste. The fans love how wholesome and endearing the episodes are and enjoy how they can relax while watching this wholesome series.

2 Amphibia Makes The Action Adventure Popular Again

Following the success of Star vs the Forces of Evil and Gravity Falls, Disney releases another supernatural adventure hit with Amphibia. Some viewers needed a bit more time to warm up to the series, unable to really enjoy the lighthearted comedic episodes, but once the plot picked up they became fans.

RELATED: Amphibia: 10 Strongest Character Moments (So Far)

Each and every character and piece of lore is thought through, making for a great open-world experience, and on top of the thrilling plot is the incredible action. Next to Star VsAmphibia brings the greatest action sequences to the network, and moving forward with season 3, the action and the drama will be that much greater.

1 The Owl House Will Make You Believe In Magic Again

Beloved by viewers aged well into their 30s, The Owl House is a brilliantly written series, layered with lovable characters and fantastic lore. The animation is a sight to behold in itself as it is so incredibly seamless, it will bring chills down the spine with how good it is, and if that doesn’t give you chills, then maybe the drama will.

Not relying on shipping or wasteful plot points, the show tells a well-paced story so far about the main character Luc’s coming-of-age journey. The humor is on-point and the adventures are even more fun to watch. The LGBTQ+ representation is also handled so incredibly well it has to be commended as well. Overall, this is a show that will be talked about for some time and it’d be a complete shame to miss out on watching it as it airs.

NEXT: 15 Children’s Cartoons That Were Secretly Not Really For Kids

The 25 most popular cartoons watched by children in Russia

We have written many times about cartoons: Soviet, Japanese, psychedelic. Only the studio «Disney» filmed more than two hundred. So that you do not get confused in the latest and classic cartoons, we have found the most important ratings and found out what children in Russia are watching.

Every day 4.5 million people search for cartoons. This is 10% of Yandex’s weekly search. They are looking for characters, songs from cartoons, plot details, instructions on how to draw a character, and just cartoons to watch. Yandex even created a huge map of 10,000 cartoons: full-length and short films, for children and adults, from dozens of countries.

As it turned out, most Russians are looking for animated series. The most popular request (expectedly) is «Masha and the Bear». The most popular cartoon series on YouTube has 2 billion views.

The most popular animated series according to Yandex

1. «Masha and the Bear» — 63 episodes

This is the most successful series in Russia: almost 10 million people have subscribed to the official YouTube channel. The plot is simple: little Masha went into the bear’s house and, like in a fairy tale, ate porridge, slept on the bed and generally made a mess. The bear, when he returned, did not eat the girl, but left her in the forest, trying to get rid of her in this way. But nothing came of it.

2. «Paw Patrol» — episode 104

Canadian animated series about the rescue team of the boy Ryder and his eight puppies. Their main mission is to protect Adventure Bay and its inhabitants. Each dog personifies one profession: from a fireman to a policeman.

3. The Barboskins — 175 episodes

The Barboskins are a cheerful canine family living in the modern world. Dad does not part with a laptop, mom does not part with a dream of a stage. They have five children and each of them dreams of his own: one wants to be a great football player, the other wants to win the Nobel Prize.

4. «The Adventures of Luntik and his friends» — 439 episodes

This is a story about a kind creature that was born on the Moon and fell from it to Earth. Luntik lives in a forest clearing near a pond and tries to make friends with its inhabitants, who, however, are not always friendly.

5. Peppa Pig — 220 episodes

British animated series of short 5-minute episodes about the life of one family. Main characters: Peppa Pig, her younger brother George Piglet, Mummy Pig and Daddy Pig. In the cartoon, five-year-old Peppa, with the help of her family, discovers the world around her.

6. «Fixies» — episode 121

The series tells about the family of Fixies — little people who live inside technology and fix its breakdowns. The cartoon is based on the story «Guaranteed little men» by Eduard Uspensky. Perhaps the most informative animated series from the collection. If you don’t know how a washing machine or an elevator works, feel free to turn on the Fixies with your children.

0010

Italian series about five fairy girls who study in the same school of magic. In each episode, they have to constantly save the world from the attack of dark forces and solve their own, quite teenage problems.

8. The Flash and the Wonder Cars — 52 episodes

An American TV series about AJ, a boy who drives a pickup truck named Blaze, who wins every race in Axel City. Together they go on an adventure, training their knowledge of physics and mathematics along the way.

9. My Little Pony — Friendship is Magic — 148 episodes

This is a Hasbro series. All events unfold in a fictional country — Equestria, inhabited by ponies. In this world, nothing happens by itself: the sister rulers of Equestria are responsible for sunrise and sunset, pegasi control the weather, the seasons are replaced by magic.

10. «Lady Bug and Super Cat» — 27 episodes

French-Korean TV series about two Parisian teenagers, Marinette Dupain-Cheng and Adriana Agresta, who turn into superheroes Lady Bug and Super Cat. To protect the city from supervillains, of course.


Kinopoisk rating

Kinopoisk is the most popular Russian-language resource about everything related to cinema and cartoons. In the world, it ranks second in terms of attendance (after the American Imdb). All ratings are compiled by users themselves, of which there are more than 100 million on the site. They rate the watched movie from 1 to 10, and this is how the rating is formed.

1. «The Lion King» — 8.7

A cartoon that needs no introduction and constantly occupies the top lines of ratings all over the world. The Lion King Mufasa has an heir named Simba. He will have to face betrayal, endure the bitterness of loss and exile, but in the end find true friends and win back his place in life.

2. WALL-E — 8.4

The events take place in the distant future. People completely littered the Earth and flew away to look for other habitable planets. Robot WALL-E (Universal Annihilator Landscape Light, Intelligent) is one of the thousand robots left to clean up the deserted planet. After 700 years, only he remains in a working state, and acquaintance with the culture of the Earth makes him a person.

3. How to Train Your Dragon — 8.4

Seven generations of Vikings grew up on Berk Island. Dragons interfered with their peaceful life. They burned houses, carried away livestock and food. But one day, the son of the leader of the tribe, Hiccup, meets a dragon that does not kill him, and gradually tames the creature. It changes the lives of two worlds at once.

4. Zootopia — 8.3

Zootopia is a modern city populated by a variety of animals, from huge elephants to tiny mice. It is divided into areas that repeat the natural habitat of different inhabitants — there is both the elite Sahara Square and the inhospitable Tundratown. One day, a new police officer appears there, the cheerful bunny Judy Hopps, who has to solve the most difficult case.

5. Balto — 8.3

The cartoon’s slogan is: «Half husky, half wolf, all hero.» Balto is a persecuted tramp in the icy wilderness of Alaska. One day, a diphtheria epidemic engulfs the children of a small village, and a fierce blizzard makes all roads impassable. Only a dog team can bring medicine, but all the dogs have lost their way somewhere in the middle of Alaska. As you understand, only Balto can save everyone.

6. Beauty and the Beast — 8.3

The success of this cartoon is evidenced by constant adaptations: the last one came out in 2017 with Emma Watson in the title role. The plot is almost the same as in the Russian «The Scarlet Flower». A terrible Beast lives in an enchanted castle hidden in a dark forest. Only a beautiful girl who will love him for who he is can restore him and all the inhabitants of the castle to a human form.

7. «Puzzle» — 8.1

Riley is an ordinary eleven-year-old schoolgirl, and, like each of us, her behavior is determined by five basic emotions: Joy, Sadness, Fear, Anger and Disgust. Every day, emotions help her cope with problems and guide all her actions. For the time being, they live together, but suddenly it turns out that Riley and her parents have to move from a small cozy town to a noisy metropolis.

8. «Aladdin» — 8.1

In the city of Agrabah lives Aladdin, a thief with a heart of gold and Abu the monkey. One day, a magic lamp with a Genie falls into his hands, who is ready to fulfill any three wishes of the young man. Aladdin is in love with the Sultan’s daughter and will do everything to win her heart.

9. Treasure Island — 8.1

This is the only Russian-language cartoon in the Kinopoisk rating. The schooner «Hispaniola» travels the seas in search of an island where the legendary treasures of Captain Flint are hidden. A conspiracy is brewing on the ship: the robbers, led by the one-legged John Silver, want to stage a coup.

10. «Song of the Sea» — 8. 1

At the end of the 20th century in Ireland, on a small island with a lighthouse, an ordinary fisherman named Conor enters into an alliance with silk. Silks are mythical creatures of Irish folklore. The couple has a son named Ben, who, like his father, turns out to be a simple man. Shelki is expecting her second child, but for unknown reasons she is forced to give birth at sea and leave a newborn girl on the shore. The girl is given the name Saoirse.

11. «Ice Age» — 8.1

To avoid the approaching cold due to the Ice Age, animals migrate south. But some of them decide to stay — the gloomy mammoth Manfred and the sloth Sid. By chance, they find a human cub and decide to return it to the people.

12. «Monsters Inc» — 8.1

Monsters under your bed (or rather in your closet) really exist. Their life depends on the children’s cry: the cry supplies electricity to all the houses in the city. The cartoon tells about the life of monsters, their problems and hard work. One day, a human child enters their world. The slogan best describes the essence of the picture: «We think they are scary, but in fact — we scare them.»

13. The Fox and the Dog — 8

An adaptation of Daniel P. Mannix’s book The Fox and the Dog. A story about Todd the fox and Copper the puppy, who were best friends in childhood. But when they have grown up, one of them should become a hunter, and the second — an object of hunting.

14. «Mulan» — 8

A warlike Hun tribe invades China, and the emperor announces a general mobilization — each family must provide one soldier. In the family of a young girl Fa Mulan, the only man is her father Fa Zu, an old and weak man. Secretly from her relatives, Mulan, dressed in men’s clothes, goes to fight the Huns herself.

15. Shrek — 8

A cartoon about the kingdom of fairy tale characters and the green ogre Shrek. who lives in the swamp and scares people. One day, Lord Farquaad, the ruler of the magical kingdom, drove all the fairy-tale inhabitants to the swamp and put an end to Shrek’s quiet life. The giant can win back his swamp only if he brings the lord Princess Fiona, who is imprisoned in a tower with a dragon.

The best cartoons for kids that will teach them something important: what to watch

Laika Entertainment

This puppet studio manages to show the world through the eyes of children, without compromise and false notes. You won’t find such honesty anywhere. They have impeccably twisted, dashing and funny plots, behind which a deep, sometimes directly philosophical, meaning emerges. Therefore, these cartoons are great for family viewing with children.

Coraline

This is one of the best full-length cartoons. It tells about an abandoned girl who reconciles with her unlucky parents. Scary! Shows and works through a bunch of children’s fears about the «fake mother», «fake reality» and so on. See for yourself first, and then decide whether to show the children. There is a confrontation between «ideal» and «stupid» parents, from which, as a parent, I understood a lot about myself and revised some settings.

ParaNorman

Terribly funny parody of a film about the supernatural, which tells about childhood loneliness and incomprehensibility, indifference and narrow-mindedness of adults. Although there is a ghost on a ghost, the cartoon is not particularly scary and is also on the list of the best for family viewing with children. But there is a very sad twist at the end, be ready to support the kids and talk to them about it.

The Boxtrolls

A cool cartoon fairy tale for children about the confrontation between the «civilized» and «wild» worlds; the donut is clear, it turns out that the «wild» world is actually much more humane (and the viewer sometimes recognizes himself in «civilized» characters). Although the main thread of the plot is rather hackneyed, the story is so well told that you can’t put it down.

Kubo (Kubo and the Two Strings)

One of the best children’s cartoons about parental love, misunderstanding, understanding and forgiveness. At the same time, no tediousness, usual for parables!

Tomm Moore

His cartoons for kids are second to none. Moore knows how to weave ancient fairy tales into the modern world, to show how the present grows from the past, the present becomes the past, and everything overgrows with the future. Cartoons are ornamented like ancient books, they sound magical, ancient and modern music at the same time.

The Secret of Kells

Great cartoon fairy tale for children. The story of the writing of the Book of Kells, shown through the eyes of a boy from a monastery and his wild girlfriend from the forest.

Song of the Sea

Formally, something like a film adaptation of Irish mythology for modern children, but in fact it turned out to be one of the best children’s cartoons, from which it intercepts the throat, constricts the heart and then walks under the impression for several more days.

Stefan Obier, Vincent Patatar and Benjamin Renna and their cartoon

Ernest and Celestine (Ernest et Célestine)

Delicate, ridiculous and pure fairy tale about the friendship of two outsiders — Mosona — Medved — Medical — Medical — Medias — Medias — Medias — Medias — Medias — Medias — Medias — Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Medias in the Medical and Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Medias — Medias and Messon where bears and mice live in different worlds, fear and hate each other. The cartoon is delightfully drawn: each character is shown with almost a couple of lines, but the character is visible at the same time. And the Russian version of this cartoon for children is beautifully voiced.

Obie and Patar a few years before EiS filmed the cartoon «Panic in the Village» — an hour or more of uncomplicated fooling around. Although I really like Panic, I don’t dare to recommend it to everyone, because I’m afraid that they will curse me.

Aardman

English plasticine studio, smart and cynical guys, in children’s cartoons they gently laugh at the world around them, and in older ones they mock it harshly. Not all of their cartoons are good, I only write worthwhile ones (well, in my opinion!).

Shaun the sheep

A 150-episode series and a full-length cartoon for children of the same name (there is also another full-length film, Farmageddon). Light, funny and kind without idiocy stories from the life of a herd of sheep on a farm, their owner, his dog and other animals. The relationship of the sheep and the owner with the dog repeats the hierarchy of children and parents, and the lambs are cunning, hiding and trying to figure out the world around them, like children, and the owner grabs his head, fixes the sheep’s shoals, or remains in blissful ignorance, like a parent. The children and I still “watch” some films we didn’t like with Sean or simply cheer up with his help.

Wallace and Gromit

Several short and full-length cartoons for children about a naive inventor and his smart dog. It is laced with slight cynicism and snobbery, but sweet and funny.

Escape from the chicken coop

An epic drama about the life of chickens on a chicken farm, their cruel mistress and her henpecked husband. This cartoon for watching with children impresses with the scope of the plot, not always good humor and an idyllic (and impossible) ending. In this cartoon, one of the secondary chickens is killed and a pie is baked from it! This can unsettle especially impressionable children and make them vegetarians for a while, so think about whether to show them.

Mark Osborne

This American director manages to give new life to hackneyed plots and shoot them as if for the first time: with real characters and real situations. As a director, he directed only two full-length cartoons for children.

Kung Fu Panda

Another great cartoon for kids, included in the list of the best. A clumsy panda becomes a Kung Fu master and defeats the great villain, his teacher’s former best student. This is a Cinderella story; about the teacher and student; about working on oneself; about growing up and choosing a path. And everything is set against the backdrop of Chinese landscapes and twisted into the genre of a satirical action comedy. And a very bright character of this same villain — a brilliant student who bowed to the teacher too much so as not to hate him later.

The Little Prince (Le Petit Prince)

A story of friendship between an overgrown child and an overly infantile old man, touching and deep. In Saint-Exupéry’s book, growing up is something like the inevitable death of the soul, while in the children’s cartoon the difficult path of another, «non-lethal» growing up is shown. And yet, I was struck by how subtly the director understood the future of the Little Prince and his clumsy attempts to fit into the human world.

Tom McGrath

He made two great cartoons for kids, a few shorts and some bullshit. I’ll tell you about the cool ones!

Madagascar

Four animals from the New York Zoo are unexpectedly released into their natural habitat and have to learn to live on their own. This is one of the best full-length cartoons for children about growing up, about how you stop relying on adults and find your own way. There are two sequels, but they are more to monetize the story than to say something new.

The Boss Baby

An excellent cartoon for family viewing with children. A boy has a younger brother, his whole life goes awry, and the boy invents a gigantic spy drama to explain what is happening to himself. Very fun, touching and smart, it is worth showing the children when a new child appears in the family.

Rob Minkoff and his cartoon

The Adventures of Mr. Peabody & Sherman

What can I say, if we named a dog after one of the characters in this cartoon! This is a children’s cartoon about a genius dog who took on a child. A story about parenthood, about how parents try to make their children special, and children want to be ordinary; it is also a metaphor for special parents — gays, singles, adoptive parents.

Illumination

They make great deep cartoons and commercial failures. I’ll tell you about the good!

Despicable Me Parts 1 & 2

Villain Gru wants to become the best villain in the world so that he can finally be praised by his indifferent, devaluing mother. To pull off one adventure, he adopts three orphan sisters, and as a result, his heart melts, and he learns to love and be a parent. It would seem a banal plot, but it is so funny and honestly told that it is worth watching. There is also a third series and a full-length cartoon for children «Minions», but they are much worse and simpler.

Sing

The story of a whole crowd of Cinderellas who enter a singing competition and end up on top of fame as a result. This is also a banal canvas, but all the characters are so charming, real musicians are so readable behind them, and the music balances so delicately between the vulgar mainstream and catchy depth that the picture still got into my list of the best cartoons for children.

DreamWorks

Some of the best children’s cartoons from this studio were already in the selection, but they were assigned to their directors. And one cartoon did not get anywhere, and now it represents this studio.

How to Train Your Dragon

The fearsome Viking leader has a puny son who is good for nothing. And the tribe has a hard time, because it is constantly pestered by dragons. Well, then, of course, it turns out that dragons must be dealt with not by force, but by intelligence and humanity, and this same son turns out to be on top. A cool movie for teenagers who like to make fun of themselves, but younger children will get it too. This is a film adaptation of a book (more precisely, a series of books), but books are worse! And the following cartoons for children in this series are also worse and did not make it into the selection.

Jean-Francois Poulet, François Brisson and their cartoon

Snow Battle (La guerre des tuques)

One of the best New Year’s cartoons for children about how a game is made literally from nothing, how children’s relationships develop and do not develop, in general, this is the most difficult genre of children’s cinema — children’s realism.

The artist Jacques Tardy and a cartoon based on his comics

Avril and the fake world (Avril et le Monde truqué)

This is an ironic steampunk for teenagers — a rather extraordinary full-length cartoon about the world was not committed discoveries.

Artist Paco Roca and his comic book cartoon

Arrugas

An amazing full-length cartoon that shows old people in a nursing home like children in kindergarten. It talks about Alzheimer’s disease, so the cartoon is not very funny. But it is all permeated with sad humor and tenderness for the fading human life. I would say he is 12+.

Artist Marzhan Satrapy and a cartoon according to her comic book

Perspolis

History of difficult growing up the Iranian girl first in the Iranian, then exhausted by revolutions, then in Europe, then again in Iran, in Europa. Witty and scary, very interestingly rendered and one feels that this is an autobiography — all the characters are alive. There is sex and death in the cartoon, maybe he is 12+ or even 16+.

Studio Petersburg and its cartoon

Smeshariki. Start

This is the only Russian cartoon for children from the entire collection. In fact, this is a cartoon about our naive parents and grandparents, who in the 90s believed everything they say on TV. So to say, a cartoon of understanding and dedication. And it has very interesting music in its own way.

Pixar

The great studio founded by George Lucas, bought out of him by Steve Jobs and later bought by Disney. In his best children’s cartoons, Pixar manages, not far from the American mainstream, to talk about the most important things and show the modern Western world in a satirical way.

Toy Story 1, 2, 3, 4

Every child knows that when he turns away, his toys come to life. Well, Pixar just made a cartoon for children about what happens to these toys. Terribly charming, funny, deep and exciting.

Finding Nemo

The story of a clownfish who is so mad at his son that he won’t let him live. As a result, the son rebels, gets into trouble, the father has to save him, they both change and, so to speak, «understand a lot about their mistakes.» A very charmingly told story, and there are cool marine characters. Although the biological reliability let us down: for example, real clown fish change gender, but in the cartoon this issue was delicately avoided. There is a sequel, Finding Dory, a full-length cartoon for children, but it is much more conformist and boring.

The Incredibles

An epic story about two superheroes who get married, have children, try to live a boring ordinary life — and then, as usual, a sharp turn in life, and they have to superhero again, this time in front of children . This cartoon to watch with children is, firstly, a metaphor for family life (we were all superheroes before we put wedding rings on our fingers and began to hang laundry more often than we read books), and secondly, a story about gifted children — outsiders who are forced to hide their talent, and then they learn to use this talent and fit into this world. Mind I Elastica! There are sequels, but they are worse.

Cars

The best cartoon for kids about cars. The story of one star-studded car that, due to its own stupidity, ended up in a remote town, and it turned out that the main thing in life is not victory, but human (well, that is, machine) relationships. There are sequels, but I like them less, some less original.

Monsters University

«University» is the story of a fearless, but not at all scary, little monster in a world where only fear is quoted. In fact, this is a story about the fact that talent is different, that motivation is a great power, and that a brilliant manager is sometimes more important than a brilliant creator. This is a prequel to the children’s cartoon «Monsters, Inc», which I like much less, very banal.

Puzzle (Inside Out)

Brilliant understanding of adolescence, the psychological rationale for many teenage and adult jumps and one might say a friendly elbow for teenagers who seem to have been suddenly thrown to the sidelines of life. In this full-length cartoon for children, the emotions inside the girl’s head seem to take care of her and help her survive.

Disney

Throughout the twentieth century, this animation studio made cartoons for children about eternal values ​​such as love to the grave, dissolution in a loved one and patient enduring troubles. These ideas left deep dents in the heads of poor girls and largely determined their fate. Now the public perception of such ideas has changed, and throughout the 21st century, Disney is apologizing for the past and making cartoons of a different kind: about self-sufficiency, the ability to change one’s destiny, and love as a partnership. And here, too, it seems to me, he goes too far.

Rapunzel (Tangled)

A tangled story about a long-haired girl who was brought up in strict obedience and isolation, and then she discovered the world around her, began to beat men with frying pans and had her hair cut. I don’t really like this children’s cartoon, but it is iconic, so I included it here.

Frozen

A beautiful story about talent and the ability to handle it, and about the fact that the role of parents is to teach a child to understand and not be afraid of himself. And also about the fact that a sister’s love can be more important and more honest than a man’s love. But it’s a Disney cartoon for kids through and through — with Disney smiles, Disney jokes and Disney music, so I can imagine those who would be sick of it.

I was sure that the next Disney cartoon would be Eaten (about Little Red Riding Hood), but for some reason it worked out!

City of Heroes (Big Hero 6)

Formally a children’s cartoon for boys, but I think it’s unisex! A famously twisted spy story about robotics, science, teenage maximalism and self-realization. The only thing I don’t like (spoiler!) is that the main villain is a scientist.

Zootopia

But this is the best Disney cartoon for children — understanding the ideas of tolerance and universal equality, honestly and without discounts, and everything is wrapped in the wrapper of such a carrot thriller.

Studio Ghibli

This is the iconic Japanese animation studio founded by the famous director and screenwriter Hayao Miyazaki together with his colleague Isao Takahata. They manage to tell stories in some special language; one of the main topics for them is the harmony of man and nature, work on oneself and inner purity. For some reason, the descriptions of the best films for children from this studio turned out to be kind of mean, but, probably, this is because they are very difficult to retell, you need to watch! You can watch almost everything from them, but I chose my favorite.

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind

A story about a girl who saves the world with her purity and love. It sounds cliched as hell, but this is one of the best cartoons for families to watch with kids.

My Neighbor Totoro

Full-length cartoon for children about two sisters and their life in a country house and harmony with nature.

Porco Rosso

The story of a pilot who became a pig but still loves one girl. A very poignant cartoon-tale for children about the possibility and yet the impossibility of love.

Princess Mononoke

A cartoon to watch with children about the confrontation between people and the forest and that it is impossible to defeat nature without destroying yourself.

Spirited Away

In this full-length cartoon, a girl saves her parents, who are mired in a consumerist attitude to the world.

Howl’s Moving Castle

Another good cartoon for family viewing with children. A girl becomes an old woman due to a witch’s curse and settles in the moving castle of a wizard she loves. He turns out to be terribly infantile and weak, and she is strong, and together they are capable of anything.

Memories of Marnie

And the last picture in the list of the best cartoons for children. Family history in such a beautiful and fragile shell that it takes your breath away.

Do you like to watch cartoons with your children?

The 10 best cartoons of 2021 for kids and adults

December 19, 2021LikbezKino

A new Pixar work, the return of The Addams Family, as well as a musical from the famous author.

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1. Raya and the last dragon

Raya and the Last Dragon

  • USA, 2021.
  • Fantasy, adventure.
  • Premiere: 4 March.

Once upon a time, brave dragons sacrificed themselves against the evil Druun. But after 500 years, the monsters returned. And now Raya and her companion Tuk-Tuk need to find the last dragon that will help them again in the fight.

Disney has been developing this cartoon since 2017, describing the idea as a fantasy adventure with a southeastern theme. The picture was supposed to be released back in 2020, but due to the closure of cinemas, the premiere was postponed.

2. The Mitchells vs the Machines

The Mitchells vs the Machines

  • USA, Canada, Hong Kong, 2021.
  • Comedy, fantasy, adventure.
  • Premiere: 30 April.

Young Katie Mitchell wanted to make films since childhood and even entered film school. But instead of sending the child there by plane, the girl’s father decides to arrange a family trip around the country. It is at this time that the uprising of the machines suddenly begins. Now the Mitchell family needs not only to find a common language with each other, but also to save their lives.

3. Wish Dragon

Wish Dragon

  • China, USA, Hong Kong, 2021.
  • Comedy, adventure.
  • Premiere: 11 June.

Frame from the cartoon «Magic Dragon»

An ordinary guy Dean one day finds an old teapot in which a dragon has been imprisoned for many centuries. The magical creature is ready to fulfill the young man’s three wishes, after which he will be freed from slavery. But in fact, Dean does not need fame and fortune, he just wants to meet an old girlfriend. And the dragon himself is very interested in what has happened in the world during the years of his absence.

4. Luca

Luca

  • USA, 2021.
  • Fantasy, adventure.
  • Premiere: 17 June.

Young Luka lives underwater with his relatives — sea monsters. But one day, together with a friend, the hero gets ashore and plunges into the world of the Italian Riviera. Only teenagers should never reveal their true nature to others.

Enrico Casarosa directed another work from the famous Pixar studio. Prior to that, he directed the short film Moon, which was nominated for an Oscar.

5. Vivo

Vivo

  • USA 2021.
  • Adventure, musical.
  • Premiere: 6 August.

A kinkajou named Vivo lives happily with his elderly owner and earns by performing on the street. But after the death of his only friend, the animal goes to another country to fulfill his dream.

The idea for this cartoon was suggested by the actor, screenwriter and composer Lin-Manuel Miranda. In recent years, he is known for the musical Hamilton that conquered the whole world. The director was the creator of «The Croods» Kirk de Micco.

6. The Boss Baby 2

The Boss Baby: Family Business

  • USA, 2021.
  • Comedy, adventure.
  • Premiere: 19 August.

A still from the cartoon «The Boss Baby 2»

The intelligent child Ted has already grown up and remains the same businesslike. But in the family of his brother, Tina is born, who is also secretly working for BabyCorp. Now the girl, along with her father and uncle, will have to stop another villain.

A scandal erupted around this cartoon even before the premiere. The slogan, which in the original sounded like Playtime is over (“Playtime is over”), in Russian localization turned into an obscene “New nipple is just a bomb.

7. The Addams Family: Hot Tour

The Addams Family 2

  • USA, Canada, 2021.
  • Fantasy, comedy, adventure.
  • Premiere: 14 October.

In 2019, the famous franchise returned to the screens in the form of children’s animation. In the sequel, the familiar Addams family goes on a trip across the country to mend their relationship. But in parallel, Wednesday finds out that she may have other parents.

8. Ron’s Gone Wrong

Ron’s Gone Wrong

  • USA, UK, Canada, 2021.
  • Fantasy, adventure.
  • Premiere: 21 October.

In today’s technological world, every child has a robot that knows and supports the interests of its owner. But the humble boy Barney gets a broken copy named Ron. However, it gradually becomes clear that it is the shortcomings that make a friend unique.

9. Encanto

Encanto

  • USA, 2021.
  • Adventure, fantasy, musical.
  • Premiere: 25 November.

Still from the cartoon «Encanto»

The action of the cartoon takes place in the secret place of Encanto, where a house is hidden in the mountains. The Madrigal family lives there, each of whose members has some kind of magical power. Only Mirabelle did not get superpowers. But it is she who will have to save everyone when danger comes.

Lin-Manuel Miranda also had a hand in this project. And the directors were Byron Howard and Jared Bush, who directed the famous Zootopia.

10. Sing 2

Sing 2

  • France, Japan, USA, 2021.
  • Comedy, adventure, musical.
  • Premiere: 23 December.

Koala Buster is assembling a new musical cast and plans to put on a show at the Crystal Tower Theatre. But for this, the hero needs to find the legendary performer — the lion Clay Calloway.

UPD. Text updated in December 2021.

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New cartoons already released in cinemas

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List of new cartoons already released in cinemas. The main full-length novelties of cartoons and animations from the rental of the Russian Federation are located here sorted by the date of the premiere and visitors can leave a review for each if they have already watched it.

1 — 10 of 344

1 2 3 4 5 … »

By release dateTop by viewersTop by criticsBy number of reviews

We are monsters 2

7.0 (24)

Cartoon We are monsters 2 continued the adventures of the heroes of the 2017 animated hit We are monsters. The plot of the second part revolves around the wedding of Baba Yaga with the Hunchback. The Wishbon family cannot miss such a holiday, declaring for a celebration. However, the lovers are suddenly kidnapped by the girl Starr right in…

Year:

2022

Genre:

  • Cartoons
  • Family

Release date in Russia:

08/25/2022

Superpets

5. 8 (4)

Cartoon Superpets will tell about the pets of Batman and Superman, who are no worse than their eminent owners — superheroes can save the whole world alone. Krypto is Clark Kent’s favorite and has all of Superman’s powers, helping him deal with rising crime in Metropolis…

year:

2022

Genre:

  • Militants
  • Comedy
  • Cartoons

Date of exit in Russia:

9000.2022

Koschey. Bride kidnapper

7.0 (3)

6.1 (15)

Cartoon Koshchei. The Bride Thief will tell about an eternally young and stylish character who, for three hundred years, still cannot find a worthy wife for himself. How many princesses he did not kidnap! He threatened some, intimidated others, turned others into frogs, and not a single one of these «ears …

year:

2022

Genre:

  • Cartoons
  • Comedy
  • Adventures
  • Fantasy
  • melodramas
  • Family

    Suvorov: The Great Journey

    4. 5 (2)

    The cartoon Suvorov: The Great Journey will tell about a young man named Grisha, whom fate separates from his beloved, because he is drafted into the army and he goes on a campaign through the Alps, having got into the service of great commander Alexander Vasilievich Suvorov. An exciting big page awaits Grisha ahead…

    year:

    2022

    Genre:

    • Biography
    • Historical
    • Cartoons

    Release date in Russia:

    05.05.2022

    Buka. My favorite monster

    7.5 (2)

    6.3 (13)

    Cartoon Buka. My Favorite Beast is a new Russian adventure animation about a princess who escaped from the palace and went to look for her prince. Once in the forest, by the will of fate, she becomes a prisoner of the monstrous Buki, the most terrible robber in the kingdom. However, soon the prisoner…

    Year:

    2021

    Genre:

    • Cartoons
    • Adventures

    Release date in Russia:

    28. 04.2022

    Sonic 2 Movie

    6.0 (3)

    5.5 (2)

    Movie Sonic 2 Movie will continue the adventures of the blue hedgehog and introduce him to various friends. The plot will continue the events of the picture Sonic in the movie 2020. Wanting to become a real hero, Sonic stays in Green Hills and dreams of proving his abilities. Dr. Robotnik and his mysterious partner Nak…

    year:

    2022

    Genre:

    • Militants
    • Comedy
    • Cartoons
    • Family
    • Fi science fiction

      Date of exit in Russia: 9000.0000 23000 2 30,0002

      Finnick

      7.3 (24)

      Finnick’s cartoon will tell about a brownie guarding the hearth and secretly living in the world of people. Finnick is a shaggy and kind creature who keeps order, sometimes he can be quite harmful, picky and even likes to play pranks. From time to time, he somehow jokes with the tenants, reminding in whose possessions about …

      Year:

      2022

      Genre:

      Cartoons

      Release date in Russia:

      03/24/2022

      I’m blushing

      8.0 (9)

      6.6 (14)

      The cartoon I’m blushing from Pixar tells about a self-confident girl who, during the teenage transition period, suddenly from strong emotions, when she blushes or becomes embarrassed , transforms into a giant furry Red Panda. And with a teenager, embarrassing situations happen all the time, because …

      year:

      2022

      Genre:

      • Cartoons
      • Fantasy
      • Comedies
      • Family

      Release Date in Russia:

      100003

      Monsters on Vacation: Transformation

      5.5 (4)

      8.3 (61)

      Monsters on Vacation: Transformation is already the fourth comedy cartoon about Dracula and other famous monsters who also like to relax in their free time famous hotel «Transylvania». This time the hotel is in a real turmoil. Van Helsing’s New Invention Isn’t Pro…

      year:

      2022

      Genre:

      • Comedy
      • Cartoons
      • Adventures
      • Horrities

      Date of exit in Russia:

      13.0222

      1 — 10 of 344

      1 2 3 4 5 … »

      Megacritic does not post movies on the site for viewing . Ratings are calculated using a special formula. Information about the rental films and posters are provided by the KinoPoisk resource.

      16 great cartoons to choose from Rules of Life

      Animated films aren’t just for kids: the older you get, the easier it is to catch the nuances hidden between the lines (and the more you want to take a break from plots based on real events). Rules of Life has collected the best cartoons, from Disney imperishables to cult classics, which are suitable both for viewing alone and for movie screenings with children.

      Rules of life

      Toy Story

      No list of animated films would be complete without Toy Story, Pixar’s debut film that changed the course of Hollywood. The film ushered in a new era of digitally animated films and pushed the genre into a higher quality future. The case when technology draws with the heart.

      The Lion King

      Millennials’ favorite animated film. From an epic soundtrack to the truly terrifying villain Scar, The Lion King touches all the senses. Hug your father after watching.

      Beauty and the Beast

      A story as old as the world is a classic love story and the first animated film to win an Oscar for Best Picture.

      Inside Out

      The hilarious and touching result of the Disney & Pixar collaboration. The action takes place in the mind of a young girl, where five emotions live that guide her actions and guide her in various life circumstances — whether it is moving to another city or entering a transitional age.

      Up

      An Oscar-winning Pixar and Disney cartoon about a widower named Carl, who decides to fulfill a promise he made to his late wife and embarks on an exciting journey to South Africa, tying thousands of balloons to his home. He accidentally grabs the young boy Russell, who is distinguished by excessive sociability and cheerfulness. An insanely touching story over which you will definitely shed a tear.

      Fantastic Mr. Fox / Fantastic Mr. Fox

      Wes Anderson’s stop-motion comedy based on the 1970 children’s book of the same name by Roald Dahl. This cartoon is by no means just for kids. Anderson’s trademark and witty style, combined with the rich graphics of the output, is an exciting and heartfelt adventure.

      Hercules / Hercules

      Disney musical about an ancient Greek god with a fun and inspiring soundtrack. Let the singing muses brighten your day.

      How to Train Your Dragon

      A DreamWorks story about a young Viking teen, Hiccup, who wants to become a dragon tamer in order to gain recognition from his tribe. One day, having caught a dragon, the boy does not dare to finish off the wounded beast and instead becomes his friend.

      Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

      Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs remains a pioneering work of art in animation today. This is not only the first Disney animated feature film, but also the first cartoon in which every frame is hand-drawn. Scene 1937 years tells about Princess Snow White, who lives under the yoke of the evil stepmother of the Queen. The cartoon was so successful that, adjusted for inflation, it still ranks among the ten highest-grossing films in America. Fun fact: A year after its release, the Academy gave Walt Disney an honorary Oscar, accompanied by seven miniature awards.

      Ratatouille / Ratatouille

      Pixar’s cult film about a mouse named Remy who decides to fulfill his dream of becoming a chef by befriending a janitor in a Parisian restaurant. This inspiring blockbuster with an excellent rating won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature in 2007.

      Paddington 2 / Paddington 2

      It would be strange not to include Paddington 2 in the list of cult classics. The hilarious live-action sequel tells the story of a bear who searches for the perfect birthday present for his aunt and finds himself accused of committing a crime he didn’t commit.

      «The Secret of Coco» / Coco

      Inspired by the Mexican holiday Day of the Dead, «The Secret of Coco» tells the story of a boy, Miguel, who accidentally finds himself in the Land of the Dead, where he meets his great-great-grandfather and with his help tries to lift his family’s ban for music lessons. A colorful magnificent animated film guarantees musical enjoyment.

      Coraline

      2009 animated feature-length puppet based on the novel by Neil Gaiman. Dakota Fanning voices Coraline, a young girl who discovers an alternate, button-filled secret universe outside the door of her new home.

      Spirited Away

      A 2001 fantasy anime film about a young girl who enters the spirit world of Japanese Shinto folklore in order to free herself and her parents, returning them to the human world. Stunning, vividly animated fairy tale.

      The Nightmare Before Christmas

      Tim Burton’s cult classic The Nightmare Before Christmas is a 1993 horror musical that tells the story of Halloween Town King Jack Skellington, who opens a portal to and falls in love with Christmas so much that he decides to arrange a holiday for people himself, trying himself in the role of Santa Claus.

      Spider-Man: Into the Spider Verse

      The first animated Spider-Man movie is a fun, colorful and visually stunning achievement for the industry. The 2018 film won awards for animation, voice acting, humor and soundtrack, as well as an Oscar for best animated feature.

      List of the best cartoons (top 100)

      We have compiled for you a list of the best cartoons, sorted by Kinopoisk rating. The list includes 100 full-length cartoons, both domestic and foreign. The list was created using the All My Movies cataloging program and Kinopoisk data. If you want flexible options for working with this list (for example, to find out how many cartoons from the list were filmed in the USSR, and how many — in Russia, to find out in what year the largest number of popular cartoons came out and much more), you can download the list in database format All My Movies. The database contains much more information about cartoons than is presented in the list below. For example, the All My Movies database contains screenshots from cartoons, a high-resolution poster, and so on. If you already have the program installed, you can open the downloaded file by double-clicking the mouse. By the way, if you set yourself the goal of watching all the cartoons from the top 100 list, then in the All My Movies program it is very convenient to mark the films you have watched. In addition, the program can even advise you on what to watch next!

      Movie database for All My Movies

      Download «Best cartoons.amm», 25MB

      (If it starts opening the file instead of saving to disk, right-click above the link and select «Save target as…»)

      And here they are — the best cartoons according to Kinopoisk users.

      1. The Lion King (1994)

      The Lion King, 89 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Adventure, Family, Musical
      Director: Roger Allers, Rob Minkoff
      Cast: Matthew Broderick (Adult Simba — voice), Jeremy Irons (Scar — voice), Nathan — voice — voice), Ernie Sabella (Pumbaa — voice), James Earl Jones (Mufasa — voice)

      The majestic Lion King Mufasa has an heir named Simba. Already in childhood, an inquisitive kid becomes a victim of the intrigues of his envious uncle Scar, who dreams of power.

      Simba experiences grief, betrayal and exile, but eventually finds true friends and love. Hardened by trials, he wins his rightful place in the «Circle of Life» in a difficult struggle, realizing what it means to be a real King.

      2. WALL E (2008)

      WALL E, 98 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fiction
      Director: Andrew Stanton
      Cast: Ben Burtt (WALLуiddot; E — M-O — voice), Elissa Knight (EVE — voice), Jeff Garlinka (Captain) ), Fred Willard (Shelby Forthright — BnL CEO), John Ratzenberger (John — voice)

      From year to year, the WALL·E robot diligently works on the deserted Earth, cleaning our planet from the mountains of garbage left behind by people who flew into space. He does not imagine that incredible events will happen very soon, thanks to which he will meet friends, rise to the stars and even be able to change his former masters for the better, who have completely forgotten their native Earth.

      3. How to Train Your Dragon (2010)

      How to Train Your Dragon, 98 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Dean DeBlois, Chris Sanders
      Cast: Jay Baruchel (Hiccup — voice), Gerard Butler (Stoick — voice), Craig Ferguson (Gobber — voice), America Ferrera (Astrid — voice), Jonah Hill (Snotlout — voice acting)

      You will learn the story of a teenager, Hiccup, who is not too close to the traditions of his heroic tribe, who have been waging war with dragons for many years. Hiccup’s world is turned upside down when he unexpectedly meets the dragon Toothless, who will help him and other Vikings see the familiar world from a completely different perspective…

      4. Song of the Sea (2014)

      Song of the Sea, 93 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Tomm Moore
      Cast: David Rohl (Ben — voice), Brendan Gleeson (Conor — Mac Lir — voice), Lisa Hannigan (Bronach — voice), Finola Flanagan (Granny — Macha — voice), Lucy O’Connell (Saoirse — voice)

      The incredible story of Ben and his sister Saoirse. Together they embark on a fantasy journey through a vanishing world of ancient legends and magic in an attempt to return home.

      5. Balto (1995)

      Balto, 71 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Adventure, Family, History
      Director: Simon Wells
      Cast: Kevin Bacon (Balto — voice), Bob Hoskins (Boris — voice), Bridget Fonda (Jenna — voice), Jim Cummings (Steele — voice), Phil Collins (Muk and Luk — voice)

      Half husky, half wolf, Balto himself does not know who he really is. A persecuted tramp in the icy wilderness of Alaska. Only his friends, the Russian polar goose Boris, the bear cubs Mack and Luck, and the beautiful husky Jenna, are sure that although he is not like everyone else, a noble heart beats in his chest. One day, misfortune happens. A diphtheria epidemic swept the children of a small village, and a fierce blizzard made all roads impassable. Only a dog team can travel six hundred miles through a blinding Arctic storm and bring back a life-saving medicine. But the dogs have lost their way somewhere in the frozen expanses. Now only Balto can find the team and save the children, and at the same time become a hero and a true legend!

      6. Up (2009)

      Up, 96 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Comedy, Adventure, Family
      Director: Pete Docter, Bob Peterson
      Cast: Edward Asner (Carl Fredricksen — voice), Christopher Plummer (Charles Muntz — voice), Russell — voice), Bob Peterson (Dug — Alpha — voice), Delroy Lindo (Beta — voice)

      Grumpy Carl Fredricksen, 78, thinks life is passing him by. To keep his promise to his dead wife, he decides to fulfill his dream of a great adventure by tying thousands of balloons to his house and flying off into the wilds of South America. Not flying even half a mile, the traveler discovers that he inadvertently took with him an extremely talkative and incorrigibly cheerful 8-year-old boy named Russell …

      7. Puzzle (2015)

      Inside Out 94 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Family
      Director: Pete Docter, Ronaldo Del Carmen
      Cast: Amy Poehler (Joy — voice), Phyllis Smith (Sadness — voice), Richard Kind (Bing Bong — voice) , Bill Hader (Fear — voice), Lewis Black (Anger — voice)

      Riley is an ordinary 11-year-old schoolgirl, and, like each of us, her behavior is determined by five basic emotions: Joy, Sadness, Fear, Anger and Disgust. Emotions live in the girl’s mind and every day help her cope with problems, guiding all her actions. For the time being, emotions live together, but suddenly it turns out that Riley and her parents have to move from a small cozy town to a noisy and crowded metropolis. Each of the emotions believes that it is she who knows better than the others what needs to be done in this difficult situation, and a complete confusion sets in in the girl’s head. Riley’s emotions must once again learn how to work together as she navigates life in the big city, settles into her new school, and makes friends with her classmates.

      8. Monsters Inc. (2001)

      Monsters, Inc.

      , 92 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Pete Docter, David Silverman, Lee Unkrich
      Cast: John Goodman (James P. ‘Sulley’ Sullivan — voice), Billy Crystal Wazowski — voice), Mary Gibbs (Boo — voice), Steve Buscemi (Randall Boggs — voice), James Coburn (Henry J. Waternoose — voice)

      The slimy bastard in the cistern, the furry beast that looks like the monster from The Scarlet Flower, the giant wood lice under the bed — they all really exist. All they need is to scare children, because they get electricity from children’s screams. The full-length cartoon tells about crises in the world of monsters, their lives. But one day the whole peaceful life of the monsters is under threat: a child enters their world. And with children there is so much trouble that they can even bring monsters.

      9.

      Beauty and the Beast (1991)

      Beauty and the Beast, 84 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise
      Cast: Paige O’Hara (Belle — voice), Robbie Benson (voice), Richard White (voice) Gaston — voice), Jerry Orbach (Lumiere — voice), David Ogden Stiers (Cogsworth — narrator — voice)

      A terrible Beast lives in an enchanted castle hidden in a dark forest. Melt the ice in his heart and restore his human appearance by removing the spell, only a beautiful girl who loves him for who he is can.

      10.

      Ice Age (2002)

      Ice Age, 81 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family
      Director: Chris Wedge, Carlos Saldana
      Cast: Ray Romano (Manfred — voice), John Leguizamo (Sid — voice), Denis Leary (Diego — voice) , Goran Visnjic (Soto — voice), Jack Black (Zeke — voice)

      Funny and dangerous adventures of heroes. 20 thousand years ago. To avoid the approaching cold due to the onset of the ice age, animals migrate south. However, some of them still decide to stay — the lonely, gloomy mammoth Manfred, as well as the reckless sloth Sid.

      By chance, the two come across a human cub. They decide to return it to the people and go on a journey. Along the way, they meet a saber-toothed cunning tiger. And now this fun company will have fun adventures!

      11.

      Mary and Max (2009)

      Mary and Max, 92 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Comedy
      Director: Adam Benjamin Elliot
      Cast: Toni Collette (Mary Daisy Dinkle — voice), Philip Seymour Hoffman (Max Jerry Horovitz — voice), Barry Humphrey (narrator — voice), Barry Humphrey (narrator — voice) ), Eric Bana (Damien — voice), Bethany Whitmore (Young Mary — voice)

      The story of the relationship of 8-year-old girl Mary Dinkle, who is bored in the suburbs of distant Australian Melbourne, and Max Horowitz, a 44-year-old lonely Jew, a resident of noisy New York chaos. Separated by age difference and two continents, Mary and Max carry their unusual friendship through the years.

      12 Treasure Island (1988)

      Treasure Island, 107 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure
      Director: David Cherkassky
      Cast: Vladimir Zadneprovsky (cowardly pirate — voice), Evgeny Paperny (Dr. Livsi — voice), Armen Dzhigarkhanyan (Silver — voice), Yuri Yakov (Ben) Gunn — voice), Valery Bessarab (Jimmy Gokins — voice)

      The schooner «Hispaniola» plows the sea in search of an island where the legendary treasures of the pirate captain Flint are hidden. There is a conspiracy on the ship. The robbers, led by the one-legged John Silver, seem to be close to the goal…

      13. Flight of Dragons (1982)

      The Flight of Dragons, 96 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama
      Director: Jules Bass, Arthur Rankin Jr.
      Cast: John Ritter (Peter Dickenson — voice), Harry Morgan (Carolinus — voice), James Earl Jones (Ommadon — voice), James Gregory (Bryagh — Smrgol — voice), Victor Buono (Aragh — voice)

      A kind green wizard lives with his beautiful blonde daughter. Naturally, he fights evil, but he’s had a lot of setbacks lately. Flying dragons serve him and he has three brothers, one of whom, a red wizard, personifies evil.

      The green wizard remarks philosophically that good would be impossible without the existence of evil. He summons his three brothers, as he is concerned that their magical powers are weakening, and people prefer to rely on science and logic.

      He proposes to create the last magical realm by joining forces, since the world should not be without magic to inspire. But the red wizard did not agree, he decided to use strength and fear, to set brother against brother.

      14. Life Awakening (2001)

      Waking Life, 99 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama
      Director: Richard Linklater
      Cast: Wylie Wiggins (Main Character), Ethan Hawke (Jesse), Julie Delpy (Celine), Adam Goldberg (One of Four Men), Richard Linklater (Pinball Playing Man — Man on Back of Boat)

      This is a philosophical parable filled with eternal questions and unexpected answers to them, here every step gives rise to new mysteries, the moments of the film collide and flow into one another, like waves rolling ashore, and the characters are not bound by any laws of nature or habitual logic. This world may be a dream, or it may be a reality, but in any case — it is beautiful!

      15. Laughter and grief at the White Sea (1988)

      Laughter and grief at the Bela Sea, 59 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Drama, Comedy, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Leonid Nosyrev
      Cast: Anatoly Barantsev (voice), Evgeny Leonov (text from the author — voice), Boris Novikov (man — voice), Klara Rumyanova (dog Zhuzha — voice), Kira Smirnova (voice) )

      Animated film based on the works of Boris Shergin and Stepan Pisakhov.

      16.

      Steel Giant (1999)

      The Iron Giant, 86 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Action, Sci-Fi
      Director: Brad Bird
      Cast: Eli Marienthal (Hogarth Hughes — voice), Vin Diesel (The Iron Giant — voice), Jennifer Aniston (Annie Hughes — voice), Harry Connick Jr. (Dean McCoppin — voice), James Gammon (Foreman Marv Loach — Floyd Turbeaux — voice)

      Residents of a quiet American province are witnessing a blinding flash and the fall of a huge flying object. A few days later, a boy named Hogarth Hughes finds in the vicinity of a giant robot that has flown to Earth from a distant space galaxy.

      Despite his formidable appearance, the alien visitor turns out to be the kindest creature. A true friendship develops between him and the brave boy. But the government and the military, who learned about the existence of the robot, decided to destroy the alien. Hogarth is the only one who can save the steel giant. ..

      17. The Beatles: Yellow Submarine (1968)

      Yellow Submarine, 90 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Fantasy, Musical
      Director: George Dunning
      Cast: The Beatles (singer), Paul Angelis (Ringo — Chief Blue Meanie — narrator — George — voice), John Clive (John — voice), Dick Emery (Jeremy Hilary Boob — Ph.D. — Nowhere Man — Lord Mayor — Max — voice), Geoffrey Hughes (Paul — voice)

      Cartoon characters, strongly reminiscent of the famous Beatles, sing and travel in a yellow submarine through the fantasy land of Pepperland, fighting for love, friendship, flowers and music against evil and bad freaks — blue bastards.

      18. Will autumn come soon? (2000)

      Daria in ‘Is It Fall Yet?’, 75 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy
      Director: Karen Discher, Guy Moore
      Cast: Rachel Anton, Brett Barsky (Sam — voice), Corey Block, Cindy E. Brolsma, Joseph Buoy

      The film begins on the last day of school at Lawndale School, where the students are already making plans for the summer. Although Daria and Jane are still in a relationship, Jane is cold towards Daria and there is tension in their relationship. Daria and Tom start dating, but due to Daria’s personality and the severity of the situation, their relationship develops extremely slowly. Apparently to avoid contact with Daria, Jane signed up for the summer at the artists’ colony in Ashfield. Daria intends to spend the holidays at home reading and watching A Sick, Mad World, but Helen sends her as an assistant to Mr. O’Neill’s Feel Free to Cry children’s camp for very sensitive children.

      19. Aladdin (1992)

      Aladdin 90 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical , Linda Larkin (Jasmine — voice), Jonathan Freeman (Jafar — voice), Frank Welker (Abu — Cave of Wonders — Rajah — voice)

      In the glorious city of Agrabah lives Aladdin, a merry thief with a heart of gold. Lives and does not know that soon the greatest adventure of his life awaits him. After all, only with his help, the black magician Jafar can take possession of an incredible treasure — a lamp in which the powerful Genie fulfills wishes. And only the cunning, ingenuity and kindness of Aladdin and his friends — the monkey Abu, Princess Jasmine and the Genie himself are able to prevent Jafar from taking possession of the lamp and seizing power over the world …

      20. Anastasia (1997)

      Anastasia, 94 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Musical
      Director: Don Bluth, Gary Goldman
      Cast: Meg Ryan (Anastasia — voice), John Cusack (Dimitri) — voice Vladimir — voice), Christopher Lloyd (Rasputin — voice), Hank Azaria (Bartok — voice)

      Anastasia is the daughter of the last Russian Tsar Nicholas, who was killed by the sinister Rasputin. She manages to escape, get with her grandmother to a crowded train station and … get lost in the crowd. Ten years pass. Anastasia has become an adult beauty and now wants to get to Paris. Will the princess be able to carry out her plan? After all, Rasputin has already risen from his grave …

      21. Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)

      Fantastic Mr. Fox, 87 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Crime
      Director: Wes Anderson
      Cast: George Clooney (Mr. Fox — voice), Meryl Streep (Mrs. Fox — voice), Jason Schwartzman (Ash — voice), Bill Murray (Badger — voice), Wallace Wolodarsky (Kylie — voice)

      Furious farmers, tired of the constant attacks of the cunning fox on their chicken coops, are preparing to destroy their enemy and his «cunning» family.

      22. Brother Bear (2003)

      Brother Bear, 82 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Aaron Blais, Robert Walker
      Cast: Joaquin Phoenix (Kenai — voice), Jeremy Suarez (Koda — voice), Jason Rise (voice) , Rick Moranis (Rutt — voice), Dave Thomas (Tuke — voice)

      Long ago, in those days when mammoths walked the Earth, and eternal ice reached the southern seas, there lived a hunter named Kenai. He was brave and dexterous, but one day he angered the Great Spirits by killing a bear — a sacred animal for him, whose totem he wore around his neck. Then the spirits of the ancestors, as a punishment, turned Kenai himself into a bear. Now he cannot speak like a human being, his own brother is hunting him, and the mischievous bear cub Koda has nailed to him, not wanting to leave the hero alone. But it was not in vain that the spirits brought Kenai and Koda together — at the hour when the hunter sees a kindred spirit in the teddy bear, he will be able to become a man again…

      23. Bambi (1942)

      Bambi, 72 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family
      Director: James Elgar, Samuel Armstrong, David Hand, Graham Heid, Bill Roberts
      Cast: Hardy Albright (Adolescent Bambi — voice), Alexander (uncredited) Flower — voice — uncredited), Bobette Audrey (voice — uncredited), Peter Ben (Young Thumper — voice — uncredited), Thelma Boardman (Girl Bunny — Quail Mother — Female Pheasant — voice — in uncredited)

      One morning in a small forest clearing lit by the spring sun, a deer was born. All the animals and birds flocked to see the new forest prince. The deer was named Bambi.

      When Bambi learned to walk and talk, he made friends — Thumper the rabbit and Flower the skunk. And one day in the meadow where his mother brought him, Bambi met a little cheerful deer — Faylin. But life in the forest can be dangerous and cruel. For the first time, Bambi encountered this when shots from a gun pierced the transparent autumn forest air — all the animals began to run away in a panic, and then Bambi first heard the terrible word — Man.

      24. Mountain of gems (2005)

      Mountain of gems, 104 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon
      Director: Alexander Tatarsky, Konstantin Bronzit, Rim Sharafutdinov, Sergey Gordeev, Natalya Berezovaya
      Cast: Alexey Alekseev (voice), A. Astakhov (voice), Alexei Batalov (voice) Batalov (voice), Irma Vitovskaya

      Tales of the peoples of Russia.

      25. City of Heroes (2014)

      Big Hero 6, 105 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Family, Action, Sci-Fi
      Director: Don Hall / Chris Williams voice acting)

      Young Hiro Hamada is a born inventor and robotic genius. Together with his older brother Tadashi, they bring to life the most advanced ideas at the Technical University of the city of the future San Fransokyo. After a series of mysterious events, the friends find themselves at the center of an insidious conspiracy. Desperate, Hiro decides to use the cheerful and good-natured experimental robot Baymax, reprogramming him into an invulnerable fighting machine.

      26. The Land Before Time (1988)

      The Land Before Time, 69 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Don Bluth
      Cast: Judith Barcy (Ducky — voice), Pat Hingle (narrator — Rooter — voice), Gabriel Damon (voice), Helen Shaver (Littlefoot’s Mother — voice), Bill Ervin (Grandfather — voice)

      There was a time when the human foot had not yet set foot on the Earth. It was a time of erupting volcanoes, huge earthquakes and terrible cataclysms. Our planet was then inhabited by amazing and strange creatures.

      The protagonist of this cartoon, the adorable brontosaurus Little Legs, set off in search of the legendary Great Valley, where, according to rumors, one can have a good meal. Along the way, he took four more baby dinosaurs with him on his journey. Amazing and dangerous adventures await this motley company on the road.

      27. Toy Story (1995)

      Toy Story, 81 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: John Lasseter
      Cast: Tom Hanks (Woody — voice), Tim Allen (Buzz Lightyear — voice), Don Rickles (Mr. Potato Head — voice), Jim Varney (Slinky Dog — voice), Wallace Shawn (Rex — voice)

      Every child believes that when he leaves his toys alone, they go about their business. This animated film allows them to make sure they are right.

      The main idea of ​​the film is that each toy is afraid to get bored, to become forgotten, replaced by another, since the whole point of their existence is to bring happiness to their owners.

      28. Toy Story: The Great Escape (2010)

      Toy Story 3, 90 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Lee Unkrich
      Cast: Tom Hanks (Woody — voice), Tim Allen (Buzz Lightyear — voice), Joan Cusack — voice (voice) , Ned Beatty (Lotso — voice), Don Rickles (Mr. Potato Head — voice)

      Andy is almost 18 years old, 3 days away from going to college, while his toys, including Woody and Buzz Lightyear, wonder about their future.

      Where will fate take them? To the attic, to the landfill, or maybe to the kindergarten «Solnyshko»?

      Events are developing in the most unexpected direction, and the adventures of the beloved heroes continue!

      29. How to Train Your Dragon 2 (2014)

      How to Train Your Dragon 2, 105 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Dean DeBlois
      Cast: Jay Baruchel (Hiccup — voice), Cate Blanchett (Valka), voice, Gerard Butler (stoick) Craig Ferguson (Gobber — voice), America Ferrera (Astrid — voice)

      Five years have passed since the reconciliation of the Vikings and dragons. While Astrid, Snotlout and the rest of the kids spend their time competing against each other in the island’s popular dragon race, Hiccup and Toothless travel the skies mapping unknown places. When one of their adventures leads to the discovery of a secret ice cave that is home to hundreds of never-before-seen wild dragons and a mysterious dragon rider, the two friends find themselves in the middle of a battle to protect the world.

      30. The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)

      The Nightmare Before Christmas, 76 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy, Musical
      Director: Henry Selick
      Cast: Danny Elfman (Jack Skellington — Singing Voice — Barrelton — Clown with the Tear Away Face — voice), Chris Sarndon — voice), Katherine O’Hara (Sally — Shock — voice), William Hickey (Evil Scientist — voice), Glenn Shadix (Mayor — voice)

      The cartoon tells about the realm of Halloween, the realm of fears and nightmares, where the dead, freaks, monsters live, led by the king of horrors Jack Skellington. Before Christmas, Jack accidentally ends up in the city of Christmas, where he finds out that somewhere there is joy, goodness and fun. He really wanted to experience this feeling — to give people happiness — and he kidnapped Santa Claus and took his place. The results were, however, the most deplorable, and no one, to put it mildly, liked his gifts. But he understood everything and corrected his mistake.

      31. Lady and the Tramp (1955)

      Lady and the Tramp, 76 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Melodrama
      Director: Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Lasky
      Cast: Peggy Lee (Darling — Si — Am — Peg — voice), Larry Roberts (voice) — voice), Bill Baucom (Trusty — voice), Verna Felton (Aunt Sarah — voice), George Givot (Tony — voice)

      A touching and exciting story of the rapprochement of two completely different dogs — a purebred room sissy and an ordinary mongrel. Graceful and fluffy as a toy, the Cocker Spaniel Lady was the favorite of the owners until a baby appeared in their family. The put on muzzle was the last straw that pushed the offended heroine to flee. But on the street, a whole bunch of dangers awaited her, the existence of which she did not even suspect. And then the dog Tramp came to the aid of the miniature black-eyed beauty, whose nobility was not in the breed, but in the soul.

      32. The Fox and the Dog (1981)

      The Fox and the Hound, 83 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Adventure, Family
      Director: Ted Berman, Richard Rich, Art Stevens
      Cast: Mickey Rooney (Tod — voice), Kurt Russell (Copper — voice), Pearl Bailey (Big Mama — voice), Jack Albertson (Amos Slade — voice), Sandy Duncan (Vixey — voice)

      Screen adaptation of the book by Daniel P. Mannix. The story of Todd the fox and Copper the puppy. The kids were very friendly, but when they grew up, nature prepared for one the role of a hunter, the other, alas, an object of hunting.

      33. Madagascar (2005)

      Madagascar, 86 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family
      Director: Eric Darnell, Tom McGrath
      Cast: Ben Stiller (Alex — voice), Chris Rock (Marty — voice), David Schwimmer (Melman — voice) , Jada Pinkett Smith (Gloria — voice), Sacha Baron Cohen (Julien — voice)

      Four pampered animals from the Central Zoo in New York — Alex the lion, Marty the zebra, Melman the giraffe and Gloria the hippo — decide to escape. Finding themselves after a shipwreck on the exotic island of Madagascar, inhabited by lemurs and fosses that eat them, travelers are horrified to realize that they will have to say goodbye to urban habits.

      There are no people, favorite cages, delicious food here. The show «The Last Hero» begins only with animals — our friends need to survive in an unusual habitat, where danger lurks at every step…

      34. Mulan (1998)

      Mulan, 84 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Military, Musical
      Director: Tony Bancroft, Barry Cook
      Cast: Eddie Murphy (Mushu — voice), Lia Salonga (Mulan — songwriter), Ming-Na ( Mulan — voice), June Foray (Grandmother Fa — voice), Oh Sung Tek (Fa Zhou — voice)

      Hard times have come for the great people: a warlike tribe of the Huns attacked the country. Dressed in men’s clothes, Mulan joins other warriors and sets out on a dangerous journey to the foot of the snow-capped mountains. She is accompanied by the funny dragon Mushu, who looks more like a small dog than a mythical monster.

      Trying to hide the secret, they get into funny situations and do not suspect that their secret is about to be revealed!…

      35. Percypolis (2007)

      Persepolis, 95 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Drama, Biography, Military
      Director: Vincent Paronno, Marzhan Satrapi
      Cast: Chiara Mastroianni (Marjane — voice), Daniel Dariau (Grandma — voice), Catherine Deneuve (Mom — voice) , Simon Abkarian (Dad — voice), Gabriel Lopez Benitez (Marji — voice)

      Tehran, 1978 Eight-year-old Marzhan dreams of becoming a prophet and saving humanity. She enthusiastically follows the events that soon lead to the revolution and the fall of the Shah’s regime. With the establishment of the Islamic republic comes the time of «revolutionary commissars». Marzhan is now forced to wear a veil, but in her dreams she sees herself as a revolutionary.

      With the beginning of the war against Iraq, bombardments, deprivation, disappearances of loved ones begin. Internal repression intensifies. The freedom-loving and rebellious nature of the girl can lead to trouble, so her parents send her to Europe. Once in Vienna, fourteen-year-old Marzhan experiences her second revolution: adolescence, freedom, intoxication with love — and with them an acute sense of loneliness …

      36.

      Rapunzel: Tangled (2010)

      Tangled, 100 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: Nathan Greno, Byron Howard
      Cast: Mandy Moore (Rapunzel — voice), Zachary Levi (Flynn Rider — voice), Donna Murphy (Mother Gothel — voice), Ron Perlman (Stabbington Brother — voice) , M. K. Gainey (Captain of the Guard — voice acting)

      Charming robber Flynn travels through life with ease, just because he is handsome, talkative and lucky. And it seemed that fortune is always on his side, until one day he chooses a high tower in a dense thicket of the forest as a «calm» refuge. Flynn is bound hand and foot by a young beauty named Rapunzel.

      If you think that the most interesting thing about her is 21 meters of magical golden hair, then you are mistaken! Trapped in a tower and desperate for adventure, Rapunzel decides to use Flynn as her ticket to the big world. First, a comical kidnapping, then an innocent blackmail — and now our heroes are free. Together with the main characters, the brave bloodhound horse Maximus, a tame chameleon and a gang of extravagant robbers will go on an adventurous journey.

      37. Ratatouille (2007)

      Ratatouille, 111 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Brad Bird, Jan Pinkava
      Cast: Patton Oswalt (Remy — voice), Ian Holm (Skinner — voice), Lou Romano (Linguini — voice), Brian Dennehy (Django — voice), Peter Son (Emile — voice)

      Rat Remy has a unique taste. He is ready to risk his own life to watch his favorite cooking show and get some seasoning or just a fresh product. Remy lives with his relatives, who do not understand him and do not accept his passion for cooking. When Remy accidentally stumbles into the kitchen of a chic restaurant, he decides to take the chance and test his skills. The young Linguini falls into the same kitchen. All he can count on is the job of janitor. But he also gets his chance…

      38. The Little Mermaid (1989)

      The Little Mermaid, 83 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: Ron Clements, John Musker
      Cast: Jodi Benson (Ariel — voice), Pat Carroll (Ursula — voice), Rene Lo (voice) voice), Christopher Daniel Barnes (Eric — voice), Paddy Edwards (Flotsam & Jetsam — voice)

      The mysterious depths of the sea hold many secrets, and the inhabitants of the ocean can tell many amazing stories. And the most incredible of them was and remains the story of the little mermaid Ariel. The daughter of the powerful king of the underwater world Triton, she once falls in love with a beautiful and courageous prince. But how can they be together — an earthly man and a sea maiden? However, real feelings overcome any obstacles. For the sake of her love, Ariel is ready to do anything. Even if, in order to find her happiness, she will forever have to leave her native ocean and become an earthly girl forever…

      39. Spirit: Soul of the Prairie (2002)

      Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron, 83 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Western, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Romance
      Director: Kelly Asbury, Lorna Cooke
      Cast: Matt Damon (Spirit — voice), James Cromwell (The Colonel), Daniel Studio — voice (Little Creek — voice), Chopper Burnet (Sgt. Adams — voice), Jeff LeBeau (Murphy — Railroad Foreman — voice)

      This adventure cartoon tells the story of a wild mustang stallion, Spirit, who travels throughout America. The brave Spirit befriends a young Native American Brook and finds love with a beautiful mare named Thunderstorm.

      Everyone is happy until the stallion is laid eyes on by people who want to make a war horse out of it…

      40. The Secret of Kells (2009)

      The Secret of Kells, 75 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Tomm Moore, Nora Toomey
      Cast: Ewan McGuire (Brendan — voice), Kristen Mooney (Aisling — voice), Brendan Cell Gleeson (Abbot) ), Mick Lally (Aidan — voice), Liam Hurikan (Brother Tang — Leonardo — voice)

      In the courtyard of the 9th century. Hidden in the Irish outback is the ancient Abbey of Kells, led by an authoritarian Abbot. An orphan nephew named Brendan, who was brought up by him, is a nice and capable boy. He is 12 years old and is hard at work with other monks to fortify the walls of the abbey against Viking raids. A new and adventurous life awaits Brendan with the arrival of Brother Aidan, famed master illustrator and curator of an unusual unfinished picture book. Brother Aidan takes the boy under his wing and initiates him into the art of illustration, awakening incredible interest and amazing talent.

      41. The Secret of the Third Planet (1981)

      Mystery of the third planet, 50 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantastic, Fantasy
      Director: Roman Kachanov
      Cast: Yuri Andreev (voice), Vladimir Druzhnikov (voice), Vladimir Kenigson (voice), Vasilozy Livanov — voice ), Grigory Shpigel (Veselyak — voice acting)

      The adventures of the girl Alice, her learned father and the melancholy Captain Zeleny, as well as the good-natured monster Gromozeka and the Govorun bird, who, as you know, are smart and quick-witted.

      42. Trio from Belleville (2003)

      Les triplettes de Belleville, 80 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy
      Director: Sylvain Chomet
      Cast: Beatrice Bonifassi (Triplets — songwriter), Lina Baudreau (Triplets — voice), Michel Cocheteau, Jean-Claude Donda, Marie-Loup Gaultier ( Triplets — voice acting)

      Champion is a little boy adopted by his grandmother Madame Souza. Madame Sousa remarks that the boy is happiest riding a bicycle, and therefore insists that he train most seriously. Years pass and, finally, the Champion becomes worthy of his own name. He is ready to participate in the world famous Tour de France race. But during the competition, two mysterious strangers in black steal the Champion. Madame Souza and her faithful dog Bruno must free him.

      During their search, they find themselves across the ocean in the huge metropolis of Belleville and meet the famous «Belleville triplets» — three eccentric music hall stars of the 30s. The triplets take Madame Suzu and Bruno under their wing. Thanks to Bruno’s keen sense of smell, the brave couple are soon on the Champion’s trail. But will they be able to thwart the evil plans of the evil French mafia?

      43. Corpse Bride (2005)

      Corpse Bride, 77 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: Tim Burton, Mike Johnson
      Cast: Johnny Depp (Victor Van Dort — voice), Helena Bonham Carter (Corpse Bride — voice), Emily Watson (Victoria Everglot — voice), Tracey Ullman (Nell Van) Dort — Hildegarde — voice), Paul Whitehouse (William Van Dort — Mayhew — Paul The Head Waiter — voice)

      The action takes place in a European village of the 19th century. The main character, the young man Victor, is dragged by the forces of darkness to the underworld and married there to the mysterious Corpse Bride, while his real bride Victoria is waiting for her fiance in the world of the living. Despite the fact that living in the Kingdom of the Dead turns out to be much more interesting than his familiar Victorian way of life, Victor understands that he will not exchange his only love for anything in any of the alternative worlds…

      44. Frozen (2013)

      Frozen, 102 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Romance, Musical Groff (Kristoff — voice), Josh Gad (Olaf — voice), Santino Fontana (Hans — voice)

      When an ancient prophecy comes true and the kingdom plunges into the arms of eternal winter, three fearless heroes — Princess Anna, brave Kristoff and his faithful reindeer Sven — go to the mountains to find Anna’s sister, Elsa, who can remove the chilling spell from the country. Along the way, they will find many exciting surprises and exciting adventures: meeting with mystical trolls, meeting a charming snowman named Olaf, mountain peaks steeper than Everest and magic in every snowflake. Anna and Kristoff will have to rally and resist the mighty elements in order to save the kingdom and those who are dear to them…

      45. Dream Keepers (2012)

      Rise of the Guardians, 97 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Peter Ramsey
      Cast: Chris Pine (Jack Frost — voice), Alec Baldwin (North — voice), Jude Law (Pitch — voice) Fisher (Tooth — voice), Hugh Jackman (Bunny — voice)

      When the evil spirit Kromeshnik encroaches on the most precious thing — childhood dreams, Northerner, Ice Jack, Rabbit, Tooth Fairy and Sandman unite for the first time to create a team of Dreamkeepers. ..

      46. Shrek (2001)

      Shrek, 90 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Andrew Adamson, Vicki Jenson
      Cast: Mike Myers (Shrek — voice), Eddie Murphy (Donkey Diazona (voice), Cameron Diaz) — voice), John Lithgow (Lord Farquaad — voice), Vincent Cassel (Monsieur Hood — voice)

      Once upon a time there lived a big green giant named Shrek in a fairy-tale state. He lived in proud solitude in the forest, in the swamp, which he considered his own. But one day, the evil shorty — Lord Farquad, the ruler of the magical kingdom, mercilessly drove all the fairy-tale inhabitants to Shrek’s swamp. And the carefree life of the green giant came to an end. But Lord Farquaad promised to return the swamp to Shrek if the giant gets him the beautiful princess Fiona, who languishes in an impregnable tower guarded by a fire-breathing dragon…

      47. Ernest and Celestine: The Adventures of Mouse and Bear (2012)

      Ernest et Celestine, 80 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Drama, Comedy, Family
      Director: Stephanie Obier, Vincent Patard, Benjamin Renner
      Cast: Lambert Wilson (Ernest — voice), Pauline Brunner (voice), Forestine Ucker (voice) — voice), Mackenzie Foy (Celestine — voice), Lauren Bacall (The Gray One — voice)

      Great friendship starts small. .. She is a little mouse, he is a huge bear. She is a child, he is an adult. She dreams of being an artist, although according to the rules of her world she must become a dentist, he is a musician and poet, leading a thoughtless life and never having a piece of bread for tomorrow. They live in different worlds: for the inhabitants of the mouse kingdom, there is nothing wilder than making friends with the «big bad bear», and its neighbors are unlikely to understand why to hang out with a mouse. But friendship and kinship of souls is akin to real magic. And what does this couple care about conventions, differences in size, historical prejudices and cultural barriers?

      48.

      101 Dalmatians (1961)

      One Hundred and One Dalmatian, 79minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family
      Director: Clyde Geronimi, Hamilton Lasky, Wolfgang Reiterman
      Cast: Rod Taylor (Pongo — voice), J. Pat O’Malley (Colonel — voice) Betty Lou Gerson (Cruella De Vil — Miss Birdwell — voice), Martha Wentworth (Nanny — Queenie — Lucy — voice), Ben Wright (Roger — voice)

      A touching and incredibly intriguing story of the search and rescue of Dalmatian puppies, which were stolen from their owners by order of the evil fury, Stervella De Vil. The greedy fashionista decided to sew a spotted fur outfit for herself from the skins of poor babies. However, the animals, united, manage to teach her a lesson.

      49.

      12 labors of Asterix (1976)

      Les douze travaux d’Astérix, 82 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Action, Fantasy
      Director: René Goscinny, Henry Gruelle, Albert Uderzo, Pierre Wortin
      Morel (Obélix — voice), Pierre Tornad (Abraracourcix — voice), Henri Labusier (Le receptionniste — voice), Jean Martinelli (César — voice)

      50 BC. The great Julius Caesar, worse than a bitter radish, was tired of a small Gallic village, its cheerful and rebellious inhabitants and their magic potion. How do you know if they really are gods? But Caesar would not have been Caesar if he had come to terms with such heresy.

      He decides to give Asterix and his friends twelve tasks that no mortal can complete. No sooner said than done. Of course, the days of Hercules are long gone. But what does Hercules have to do with Asterix and Obelix?

      It is to them that the leader of the village of Lifestatistics instructs them to accept the most august challenge. Friends are just what they need — after all, adventures continue, which means a fun life is guaranteed!

      50. Is college coming soon? (2002)

      Daria in ‘Is It College Yet?’, 90 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Romance, Comedy
      Director: Karen Discher
      Cast: Jeffrey Arend (Charles ‘Upchuck’ Ruttheimer III — voice), Rand Bridges (Professor Wood Bills — voice), Janie Mertz (Andrea — Sandi Griffin — Brittany Taylor — voice), Michelle Damato, Sarah Drew (Stacy Rowe — voice)

      The end of school is approaching, after which Daria and her classmates will have to make a difficult decision about choosing a college. Unlike Daria, Jane does not think about admission. Helen doesn’t like that Quinn doesn’t know the value of money, so she forces Quinn to get a job. Quinn takes a leave of absence from the Fashion Club to work at a French restaurant. There she becomes close to one of her colleagues, Linda (now a student), who has a drinking problem…

      51. Alyosha Popovich and Tugarin the Serpent (2004)

      Alyosha Popovich and Tugarin Zmey, 79 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: Konstantin Bronzit
      Cast: Oleg Kulikovich (Alyosha Popovich — voice acting), Dmitry Vysotsky (horse Yuliy (Tikhon) — voice acting — voice), Sergey Makovetsky (Prince of Kyiv — voice), Elena Shulman (gypsy — voice)

      In the ancient Russian city of Rostov, a son was born into a priestly family. His parents named him Alyosha. And when he grew up and became a hero, he accomplished such feats that he became the hero of Russian epics Alyosha Popovich. Only his exploits began with embarrassment …

      A Tugar enemy horde led by Tugarin the Zmey approached Rostov and demanded that the inhabitants of the city pay tribute. The priest’s son proposed a plan of action. The people approved this plan and collected a mountain of gold. Alyosha, on the other hand, managed to fail his own plan «safely», but with what a bang!

      Lost the gold and destroyed half the city. Then he swore — to catch Tugarin the Serpent and return the gold. Alyosha Popovich set off on a journey with his grandfather Tikhon, who raised and raised the boy, and a little later they were accompanied by the talking horse Julius, bought from gypsies, the almost 16-year-old beauty Lyubava, her grandmother and their donkey Moses …

      52.

      Alice in Wonderland (1951)

      Alice in Wonderland, 75 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Musical
      Director: Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Lasky
      Cast: Catherine Beaumont (Alice — voice), Ed Wynn (voice) Haydn (Caterpillar — voice), Sterling Holloway (Cheshire Cat — voice), Jerry Colonna (March Hare — voice)

      Running away from home, Alice saw under an old apple tree a large white rabbit dressed in a jacket and vest. Taking out his watch from his pocket, the rabbit hurriedly disappeared into a suspiciously dark hole. Gaining courage, Alice stepped after him … and ended up in a wonderful fairy-tale world where the most unrealizable fantasies come true.

      To get back home, Alice will have to travel through this whole strange and bizarre world, in which absolutely incredible adventures and absolutely fantastic creatures await her …

      53.

      Atlantis: The Lost World (2001)

      Atlantis: The Lost Empire, 95 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise
      Cast: Michael J. Fox (Milo James Thatch — voice), Corey Burton (Gaetan ‘The Mole’ ), James Garner (Commander Lyle Tiberius Rourke — voice), Claudia Christian (Helga Katrina Sinclair — voice), John Mahoney (Preston B. Whitmore — voice)

      Atlantis… Many daredevils dreamed of finding the legendary island sunken in the depths of the ocean. But only the young cartographer Milo Thatch was lucky: in 1914, a mysterious diary fell into his hands, indicating the path to the Lost Empire. And now the most powerful submarine in the world under the command of the fearless Captain Rourke goes out into the open ocean.

      Milo and his companions are waiting for many unforgettable adventures that surpass all the adventures of Captain Nemo: a fight with a sea monster, ancient riddles, a riot of elements, mystical forces and even a meeting with the Atlantean civilization! And this is only a small part of what awaits the heroes on their way to the secrets of the great Atlantis.

      54. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)

      Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, 83 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: William Cottrell, David Hand, Wilfred Jackson, Larry Morey, Perce Pierce , Stuart Buchanan (Huntsman — voice — uncredited), Adriana Caselotti (Snow White — voice — uncredited), Hall Johnson Shore (Finale Chorus — voice — uncredited), Eddie Collins (Dopey — Chipmunk — Squirrel sneezes — voice acting — uncredited)

      A film adaptation of the famous German fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm about Snow White, who lived in a castle with an evil stepmother, the queen, who was very proud of her beauty. Having learned from a magic mirror that Snow White has become the most beautiful girl in the world, the envious woman decided to destroy her lovely stepdaughter. But the poor girl did not die in the forest, but on the contrary, she met real friends there — funny seven dwarfs: Professor, Grumpy, Veselchak, Shy, Chihonya, Sonya and Silent…

      55. Finding Nemo (2003)

      Finding Nemo, 101 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family
      Director: Andrew Stanton, Lee Unkrich
      Cast: Albert Brooks (Marlin — voice), Ellen DeGeneres (Dory — voice), Alexander Gould (voice) (Nemo) , Willem Dafoe (Gill — voice), Allison Janney (Peach — voice)

      Amid the beautiful tropical seas, the Great Barrier Reef is home to a secluded clownfish named Marlin. He is raising his only son, Nemo. The ocean and the dangers that exist in it are very frightening for Marlin, and he protects his son from them as best he can, but young Nemo, who suffers from excessive curiosity, really wants to find out more about the mysterious reef near which they live.

      When Nemo, ironically, finds himself far from home, and also faces the threat of becoming a tankfish’s dinner, Marlin goes in search of his son. But Marlin, of course, understands that he will not be a heroic rescuer and asks for help in finding Dory, the royal blue fish, which, although it suffers from the fact that it remembers almost nothing, is kinder not to be found in the entire vast ocean !

      So, our heroes set off on a journey in which numerous difficulties and dangers lie in wait for them…

      56.

      Waltz with Bashir (2008)

      Vals Im Bashir, 90 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Biography, War, Documentary, Drama
      Director: Ari Folman
      Cast: Ari Folman (Himself — VO), Ori Sivan (Himself — Interviewee — VO), Ronny Dayag (Himself — Interviewee — VO), Shmuel Frenkel (Himself — Interviewee — VO), Zahava Solomon (Herself — Interviewee — VO)

      An old friend of Ari Folman, sitting at a bar at night, complains to him that he is haunted by the same terrible dream: 26 angry dogs are chasing him. Why 26? “It’s very simple,” the friend replies, “when we were at war in Lebanon, in 1982, my company knew that I would not be able to shoot at people. I was assigned to shoot all the dogs in the Arab village. Dogs howl and bark when they sense intruders and thus warn terrorists. And I shot all 26 dogs that were in this village. Since then, I dream of them every night. Could you do something about it?»

      57.

      All dogs go to heaven (1989)

      All Dogs Go to Heaven, 84 minutes

      Genre: Drama, Comedy, Family, Fantasy ), Judith Barsi (Anne-Marie — voice), Melba Moore (Whippet Angel — voice), Daryl Gilley (Dog Caster — voice)

      A gambling dog named Charlie Barkin dies at the hands of a pit bull, Tuporyl, and ends up in heaven — simply because all dogs must go to heaven. However, Charlie wants to pay off his killer so much that he returns to Earth.

      Together with his faithful friend Chesun, Charlie uncovers the main secret of the success of Tuporyl. Puffball uses the extraordinary abilities of an orphan girl named Annie-Marie, who can talk to animals and guess the results of rat races and horse races. Charlie kidnaps the girl and they become best friends.

      They have to go through many incredible adventures before Charlie can, having completed his earthly affairs, go back to heaven with peace of mind …

      58.

      Despicable Me (2010)

      Despicable Me 95 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Family
      Director: Pierre Coffin, Chris Reno
      Cast: Steve Carell (Gru — voice), Jason Segel (Vector — voice), Russell Brand (Dr. Nefario — voice) , Julie Andrews (Gru’s Mom — voice), Will Arnett (Mr. Perkins — voice)

      Ugly on the outside, but kind on the inside, Gru intends, nevertheless, to secure the status of the main arch-villain in the world, for which he decides to steal the Moon with the help of the minion army he created. Complicating matters are high-tech competitors and family circumstances in the form of three orphans Gru has to take care of.

      59.

      Hercules (1997)

      Hercules, 93 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Musical
      Director: Ron Clements, John Musker
      Cast: Tate Donovan (Hercules — voice), Joshua Keaton (Young Hercules — voice) (Young Hercules — song artist), Danny DeVito (Phil — voice), James Woods (Hades; Lord of the Underworld — voice)

      Hades is the ruler of the underworld. Many years ago, he was actually exiled by his older brother Zeus to the depths of Hell and now intends to catch up by gathering an army of monsters and capturing Olympus. The only one who can stop Hades is the son of Zeus, the young Hercules, so the servants of the villain kidnap the baby and turn him into a mere mortal. hero. But, as it turns out, even victory over the forces of evil is not enough to return the divine principle…

      60.

      Twelve months (1956)

      Twelve months, 55 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Ivan Ivanov-Vano, Mikhail Botov
      Cast: Erast Garin (professor — voice acting — uncredited)

      On a snowy cold winter in January, in the evening, when people are sitting in their houses, listening to the crackling of logs in the stoves, the evil stepmother sent her stepdaughter into the forest to pick up a basket of snowdrops. The poor girl had no choice but to fulfill the whim of her stepmother …

      61. Fern Valley: The Last Rainforest (1992)

      FernGully: The Last Rainforest, 76 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Bill Kroyer
      Cast: Tim Curry (Hexxus — voice), Samantha Mathis (Crysta — voice), Christian Slater (Pips), John Ward — voice (Zak — voice), Robin Williams (Batty Koda — voice)

      Hexus is an evil spirit. His job is to inflict pain and suffering. He appeared from the red-hot core of the Earth and began to destroy the fabulously beautiful tropical forest inhabited by funny mystical creatures. Only by uniting and turning their prayers to the magical forces of nature, the inhabitants of the forest managed to imprison Hexus in one of the trees.

      But soon the little animals again face a deadly danger, this time coming from people engaged in deforestation. With their powerful bulldozers, people tear down centuries-old trees, not suspecting that in one of them a powerful ruthless force is waiting in the wings, bringing death to all living things.

      But our little heroes show miracles of ingenuity and deal with all their offenders with humor.

      62.

      Road to Eldorado (2000)

      The Road to El Dorado, 89 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Romance
      Director: Bibo Bergeron, Don Paul, Jeffrey Katzenberg
      Cast: Kevin Kline (Tulio — voice), Kenneth Branagh (Miguel — voice), Rosie Perez (Chel — voice), Armand Assante (Tzekel-Kan — voice), Edward James Olmos (Chief — voice)

      Tullo and Miguel, the characters in this feature-length animated film, choose not to earn money through hard work. These two inveterate swindlers love it when the gold goes into their hands by itself. It so happened that these crooks were very lucky.

      They were lucky enough to find a mysterious map showing the majestic City of Gold, the mythical Eldorado. Together with the famous conquistador Hernan Cortes, the friends set off on a risky journey for treasures to the shores of distant America.

      63.

      Cinderella (1950)

      Cinderella, 80 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Lasky Felton (Fairy Godmother — voice), Claire Du Brie (voice), Rhoda Williams (Drizella — voice)

      Cinderella is a poor orphan who is forced by her wicked stepmother and her absurd daughters to work hard from morning to night. She so wants to get to the royal ball. The Good Fairy comes to the aid of the poor thing! With the power of magic, she endows Cinderella with a luxurious carriage, a wonderful dress and unusual crystal shoes.

      64.

      Illusionist (2010)

      L’illusionniste, 80 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama
      Director: Sylvain Chomet
      Cast: Jean-Claude Donda (The Illusionist — French Cinema Manager — voice), Edith Rankin (Alice — voice), Duncan MacNeil (additional voices — voice) ), Raymond Mearns (additional voices — voice acting), James T. Muir (additional voices — voice acting)

      The action of the cartoon takes place in Scotland, in the late 1950s. The plot revolves around the misadventures of a magician who enters a closed community and meets a girl who is convinced that he is a real magician.

      65.

      Toy Story 2 (1999)

      Toy Story 2, 92 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: John Lasseter, Ash Brannon, Lee Unkrich
      Cast: Tom Hanks (Woody — voice), Tim Allen (Buzz Lightyear — voice) Cusack (Jessie the Yodeling Cowgirl — voice), Kelsey Grammer (Stinky Pete the Prospector — voice), Don Rickles (Mr. Potato Head — voice)

      Cowboy Woody and other toys of a boy named Andy continue to live, enjoying every day. But suddenly everything changes when Woody is kidnapped by an insidious collector. It turns out that Woody is a very valuable toy from the collection, for which the Japanese Toy Museum is willing to pay a huge amount. In the collector’s house, he finds his relatives. At this time, the toys, led by Buzz Lightyear, go to save Woody. Woody learns about his famous past, Buzz and other toys go through a dangerous and thorny path. Woody is faced with a difficult question — what is his purpose? Shine in a museum window or return to your beloved owner?

      66.

      Aristocratic Cats (1970)

      The AristoCats, 78 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Music
      Director: Wolfgang Reitherman
      Cast: Phil Harris (O’Malley — voice), Eva Gabor (Duchess — voice), Sterling Holloway — voice ), Scatman Crothers (Scat Cat — voice), Paul Winchell (Shun Gon- Chinese Cat — voice)

      In an aristocratic house in Paris lives a mother cat with three kittens. The hostess is madly in love with them and, according to the will, everything should go to these charming animals. But the evil butler wants only him to get the money.

      He kidnaps her pets and leaves them in the village. An adorable and adorable stray cat and his friends help them get back home.

      67.

      Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988)

      Who Framed Roger Rabbit, 103 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Crime
      Director: Robert Zemeckis
      Cast: Bob Hoskins (Eddie Valiant), Christopher Lloyd (Judge Doom), Joanna Cassidy (Dolores) Rabbit — Benny The Cab — Greasy — Psycho — voice), Stubby Kay (Marvin Acme)

      A private detective is investigating a mysterious crime in which the cartoon character Roger Rabbit is suspected of! The detective finds himself in an unpredictable world where painted villains with real revolvers, a talking car and a seductive cartoon beauty await him. Finally, the gloomy figure of the one who framed Roger Rabbit appears on the horizon…

      68.

      Kung Fu Panda (2008)

      Kung Fu Panda, 91 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Action
      Director: Mark Osborne, John Stevenson
      Cast: Jack Black (Po — voice), Dustin Hoffman (Shifu — voice), Angelina Jolie (Tigress — voice), Ian McShane (Tai Lung — voice), Jackie Chan (Monkey — voice)

      Rescuing the Valley of Peace and all its inhabitants from the invincible and ruthless master Tai Lung must fall on the shoulders of the Dragon Warrior, Chosen among the best of the best, who becomes … clumsy, lazy and eternally hungry panda Po. He has a long and difficult path to the heights of kung- fu side by side with the legendary warriors: Tiger, Monkey, Praying Mantis, Viper and Crane. Po will comprehend the secret of the ancient Scroll and become a Dragon Warrior only if he can believe in himself …

      69.

      Fox Vuk (1981)

      Vuk, 79minutes

      Genre: Animation, Adventure, Family
      Director: Attila Dargai
      Cast: Judit Pogan (Young Vuk — voice), Josef Diabronka (Vuk — voice), Teri Földi (Iny — voice) Kag — voice), Laszlo Chakanyi (Karak — old fox — voice)

      This animated film, based on the fairy tale of the same name by I. Fekete, tells about the adventures of the little mischievous fox Vuk. This braggart survived a lot before turning into a strong, intelligent fox who managed to outwit even the famous hunter Smoothskin.

      70. Cat Trap (1986)

      Mackafogy, 96 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Crime, Comedy, Adventure
      Director: Bela Ternovski
      Cast: Miklos Benedek (Mr. Fritz Teufel — voice), Gyula Bodrogi (Maxipocak — voice), Ilona Beresh , Peter Haumann (Safranek — voice), Andras Kern (Buddy — voice)

      Cat gangs, united in criminal gangs, are preparing for a decisive battle with mice. The mice, having learned about this, were sad at first, but then it became known that a certain professor Fushimisi had invented an apparatus to make cats helpless. The best mouse agent is sent to the professor. Cats, through their informants, receive information about the danger, and killer rats are sent for the mouse agent…

      71. Sword in the Stone (1963)

      The Sword in the Stone, 79minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Musical
      Director: Wolfgang Reiterman
      Cast: Sebastian Cabot (Sir Ector — narrator in opening — voice), Karl Swenson (voiceover sequence) Ricky Sorensen (Wart — voice), Junios Matthews (Archimedes — voice), Jeannie Tyler (Little Girl Squirrel — voice)

      In ancient times, a huge stone appeared in the center of London with an ancient sword immured in it. The golden inscription on the sword said that the one who pulls out this enchanted sword will become the king of England, thereby proving his special strength and right to power. So far no one has succeeded.

      In the meantime, an 11-year-old boy Arthur lived in a distant forest wilderness, served in the castle and did not even suspect that he was destined to become a great king in the future. But this was foreseen by the wizard Merlin who lived nearby. He and his learned owl Archimedes became the boy’s mentors, subjecting their young pupil to all sorts of trials.

      He was alternately turned into animals of three different elements — fish, squirrel and bird, so that he could know the truth of life in all its manifestations and understand that not in muscles, but in wisdom and knowledge, is the real strength of a person.

      72.

      Oliver & Company (1988)

      Oliver & Company, 74 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Musical
      Director: George Scribner
      Cast: Joseph Lawrence (Oliver — voice), Billy Joel (Dodger — voice), Cheech Marin (Tito) — o (Einstein — voice), Roscoe Lee Brown (Francis — voice)

      Hand-drawn, color, full-length cartoon about the kitten Oliver, which no one bought. He was left alone on the terrible streets of New York and survived only thanks to his friends. The heroes of this almost detective story will be cats, dogs and people, because the homeless Fagon, in whose “hole” a kitten and several stray dogs found shelter, owed money to a big mafia. The fox terrier Dodger, a great specialist in stealing sausages, became the best friend and protector of the kid. Together they must help their master, otherwise they threaten to become a «snack for mean Dobermans» who have collars, but no conscience.

      73. Treasure Planet (2002)

      Treasure Planet, 95 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Romance
      Director: Ron Clements, John Musker
      Cast: Roscoe Lee Brown (Mr. Arrow — voice), Corey Burton (Onus — voice), Dane A Davis (Morph — voice), Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Jim Hawkins — voice), Tony Jay (Narrator — voice)

      16-year-old Jim Hawkins goes in search of the mysterious Treasure Planet in the company of real space pirates. Under the guidance of the ship’s cook, cyborg John Silver, he becomes a skilled «space swimmer» and more than once saves the space galleon from the most serious dangers: black holes, supernova explosions and space storms.

      But the main test awaits the young hero ahead — the betrayal of a close friend, who, together with a team of sailors, is trying to seize all the treasures by deceit and hide…

      74. Under cover of night (2007)

      Nocturna, 80 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Detective, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Adria Garcia, Victor Maldonado
      Cast: Imanol Arias (Pastor de gatos — voice), Helen Biso (Tim — L’Etoile — voice ), (L’Informateur — voice), Roger Karel (Moka — voice), Cathy Cerda (Ebouriffeuse #2 — voice)

      When orphan Tim was sitting on the roof, a star fell from the sky. In pursuit of her, he goes on a journey. On this mysterious night, everything is possible, the most incredible becomes obvious. Night creatures — the inhabitants of the country of Nocturna — reveal their secrets and troubles to Tim. Only he can save the unfortunate from danger…

      75. Pocahontas (1995)

      Pocahontas, 84 minutes

      Genre: Animation, History, Drama, Adventure, Family, Romance
      Director: Mike Gabriel, Eric Goldberg
      Cast: Mel Gibson (John Smith — voice), Christian Bale (Thomas — voice), Judy Kuhn (Pocahontas — voice), Irene Bedard (Pocahontas — voice), David Ogden Stiers (Governor Ratcliffe — Wiggins — voice) )

      A ship with our hero John Smith leaves Europe for the New World. The crew, as the captain explains, is sailing towards adventure, success, wealth.

      But the captain himself intends to find something quite definite there — gold. And the Indians live in America, and the story will be about the noble princess Pocahontas.

      76. The Adventures of the Emperor (2000)

      The Emperor’s New Groove, 78 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Mark Dindal
      Cast: David Spade (Emperor Kuzco — narrator — voice), John Goodman (Pacha — voice), Earth Kitt (Yzma — voice), Patrick Warburton (Kronk — Yzma’s Sidekick — voice), Wendie Malick (Chicha — Pacha’s Wife — voice)

      As befits a royal person, Emperor Kuzco is a very busy man. But his last occupation threatens to turn into big trouble: the ruler decided to build a water park for himself, after demolishing one of the kingdom’s villages.

      This plan would certainly have come true if the emperor himself hadn’t been in trouble: his enemies turned him into a lama! But the misfortunes did not end there: the only person who could help the emperor return to the throne and into his own body is a resident of a village doomed to demolition. The road home for Cusco promises to be very long.

      77. The Swan Princess (1994)

      The Swan Princess, 86 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: Richard Rich
      Cast: Michelle Nicastro (Adult Princess Odette — voice), Howard McGillin (Adult Prince Derek — voice), Jack Palance (Lord Rothbart — voice), Liz Callaway (Princess Odette — songwriter) ), John Cleese (Jean-Bob — voice acting)

      In those fabulous times, when enchanted castles, mysterious forest thickets, fantastic animals and evil sorcerers were everywhere on earth, this story happened. The story of a beautiful princess turned into a swan by the evil wizard Rothbart, her lover, Prince Derek, all the wonderful creatures that lived on the shores of Swan Lake, their love, friendship and fight against evil.

      78. Ralph (2012)

      Wreck-It Ralph, 101 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family
      Director: Rich Moore
      Cast: John C. Reilly (Ralph — voice), Jack McBrayer (Felix — voice), Sarah Silverman (Vanellope — voice), Jane Lynch (Calhoun — voice), Alan Tudyk (King Candy — voice)

      Ralph is a minor character in an eight-bit computer game and he’s tired of being in the shadow of the main character, Felix, the jack-of-all-trades, who always shows up to «fix» the situation! After thirty years of conscientious work as a villain, during which all the praise fell to Felix, Ralph no longer wants to be bad. He decides to go on a journey through arcade games of various genres to prove to everyone that he, too, can be a hero. On his way, Ralph meets the heroes of different games — the cold-blooded Sergeant Calhoun from the game Hero’s Duty, who protects the planet from the invasion of alien invaders, and the sweet-looking, but sharp-tongued Sweeten von Du, whose existence in the racing simulator Sugar Rush is suddenly threatened. Finally, Ralph gets a chance to show that he can do more than just destroy!

      79. Robin Hood (1973)

      Robin Hood, 83 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Melodrama
      Director: Wolfgang Reiterman
      Cast: Roger Miller (Allan-a-Dale — The Rooster — voice), Peter Ustinov (Prince John — A Lion — King Richard — voice), Terry-Thomas (Sir Hiss — A Snake — voice), Brian Bedford (Robin Hood — A Fox — voice), Monica Evans (Maid Marian — A Vixen — voice)

      Welcome to the dense Sherwood Forest, where you will meet a brave and funny little fox named Robin Hood and his best friend Little John — a big good-natured bear.

      The sheriff of Nottingham has been looking for this merry company for a long time. He is preparing a trap for his friends: an ambush will await Robin Hood at the archery tournament. But the brave fox cub is going to participate in the competition anyway: after all, only there he has a chance to see the beautiful Marian.

      And now the tournament has begun, but the sheriff cannot recognize Robin Hood in disguise among the participants. True, one accurate shot can immediately give out the best shooter in the kingdom.

      80. A Christmas Carol (2009)

      A Christmas Carol, 96 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Robert Zemeckis
      Cast: Jim Carrey (Scrooge — Ghost of Christmas Past — Scrooge as a Young Boy — Scrooge as a Teenage Boy — Scrooge as a) , Gary Oldman (Bob Cratchit — Marley — Tiny Tim), Colin Firth (Fred), Cary Elwes (Portly Gentleman #1 — Dick Wilkins — Mad Fiddler — Guest #2 — Business Man #1), Robin Wright (Fan — Belle)

      This is a Victorian cautionary tale about an old and hardened miser, Ebenezer Scrooge, who experiences a deep cleansing ordeal over the course of one night. Mr. Scrooge is a financier/money changer who has devoted his entire life to amassing wealth. He despises everything except money, including friendship, love, and the Christmas holidays.

      81. The Croods (2013)

      The Croods 98 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Kirk de Micco, Chris Sanders
      Cast: Nicolas Cage (Grug — voice), Emma Stone (Eep — voice), Ryan Reynolds (Guy) — voice), Catherine Keener (Ugga — voice), Cloris Leachman (Gran — voice)

      An earthquake destroyed the home of a prehistoric family, and now the Croods will have to find another home. And around a new and dangerous world! They come to the aid of a young nomad Malaya, whose progressive views run into the conservatism of the head of the Grug family. But only together they can survive and achieve their goal…

      82. The Snow Queen (1957)

      Snow Queen, 64 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Lev Atamanov
      Cast: Vladimir Gribkov (Ole Lukoe — voice), Maria Babanova (The Snow Queen — voice), Yanina Zheymoka (voice) Sergey Martinson (Voron — voice), Anna Komolova (Kai — voice)

      On one of the frosty winter evenings, when darkness creeps through the windows of cozy, warm houses painted with a bizarre pattern, and a blizzard howls anxiously in the courtyard, the Snow Queen rushed little Kai to her icy possessions and turned his kind, sympathetic heart into a piece of ice. Faithful Gerda had to go through many trials in order to get to the halls of the Snow Queen and save the boy, free him from the ice captivity, where spiritual coldness and indifference reign.

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      83. Sleeping Beauty (1959)

      Sleeping Beauty, 75 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama, Musical
      Director: Clyde Geronimi
      Cast: Mary Costa (Princess Aurora — voice), Bill Shirley (Prince Phillip — voice), Eleanor ), Verna Felton (Flora — voice), Barbara Luddy (Merryweather — voice)

      Long ago, in a faraway land, there lived a king and a queen. When their long-awaited daughter Aurora was born, a big celebration was held in the kingdom so that everyone could welcome the baby. Three good fairies were also invited to the ball — Flora, Fauna and Good Weather, but they forgot about the evil sorceress Maleficent.

      Insulted, she cast a curse on the princess — on the day of her 16th birthday, Aurora will prick herself on the spindle and fall asleep forever. The magic turned out to be so strong that the good fairies could not destroy it. But still, they saved the princess: she wakes up from a dream after a kiss from a handsome prince…

      84. Fantasy (1940)

      Fantasia, 125 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Music, Fantasy, Family
      Director: Norman Ferguson, James Elgar, Samuel Armstrong, Ford Beebe Jr. , Jim Handley
      Cast: Leopold Stokowski (Himself — Conductor of The Philadelphia Orchestra), Deems Taylor (Himself — Narrative Introductions), Corey Burton (Narrator: Deems Taylor overdubs), Walt Disney (Mickey Mouse), James McDonald (Percussionist — uncredited)

      An unusual, amazing cartoon concert, an unprecedented unity of music and animation. Disney and the famous conductor Leopold Stokowski decided to reproduce on the screen the fantasies that arise in the minds of people when listening to musical masterpieces.

      The painting consists of 8 classic compositions, illustrated with plot dramatizations and rhythmic abstractions, anticipating the wonders of computer graphics.

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      85.

      The Great Mouse Detective (1986)

      The Great Mouse Detective, 74 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Detective, Adventure, Family
      Director: Ron Clements, Barney Mattinson, David Michener, John Musker
      Cast: Vincent Price (Professor Ratigan — voice), Barry Ingham (Street ofsil Baker — Bartholomew — voice), Val Bettin (Dr. David Q. Dawson — Thug Guard — voice), Susanna Polashek (Olivia Flaversham — voice), Candy Candido (Fidget — voice)

      Olivia turns to Basil of Baker Street for help. She asks to find the missing father. Basil, his friend and colleague Dr. Dawson, and the dog Toby take on the investigation. The tracks lead to Professor Ratigan, a major criminal that Basil will have to confront.

      86.

      Dumbo (1941)

      Dumbo, 64 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Musical
      Director: Samuel Armstrong, Norman Ferguson, Wilfred Jackson, Jack Kinney, Bill Roberts
      Cast: James Beskett (Crow — VO — uncredited — Rumor), Herman Bing (The Ringmaster — VO — uncredited), Billy Bletcher (Clown — VO — uncredited), Edward Brophy ( Timothy Q. Mouse — voice — uncredited), Jim Carmichael (Crow — voice — uncredited)

      The story of a small circus elephant born with very large ears, which was seen as a shameful occurrence among circus elephants. But he did learn to fly.

      87.

      Wild Swans (1962)

      Wild swans, 56 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Vera Tsekhanovskaya, Mikhail Tsekhanovsky
      Cast: Askold Besedin (voice), Erast Garin (voice), Sergey Martinson (voice), Elena Ponsova (voice) , Victor Sergachev (voice)

      Full-length animated film «Wild Swans», based on the well-known fairy tale by G.Kh. Andersen.

      88. The Jungle Book (1967)

      The Jungle Book, 78 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Musical, Family
      Director: Wolfgang Reiterman
      Cast: Phil Harris (‘Baloo’ the Bear — voice), Sebastian Cabot (‘Bagheera’ the Pan — voice), Bruce Reiterman (‘Mowgli’ the Man Cub — voice), George Sanders (Shere Khan the Tiger — voice), Sterling Holloway (‘Kaa’ the Snake — voice)

      Raised by wolves, the human cub Mowgli, by the decision of the pack, must return to people so as not to fall into the clutches of the cannibal tiger Shere Khan. Together with the panther Bagheera, Mowgli sets off on a journey towards unexpected acquaintances and dangerous adventures.

      He will befriend the carefree bear Baloo, be kidnapped by monkeys, become a prisoner of the insidious boa constrictor Kaa, and much more will happen to the brave boy who, according to Kipling himself, “loves to pull death by the mustache.”

      89. The Little Humpbacked Horse (1947)

      Humpbacked Horse, 57 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Ivan Ivanov-Vano, Alexandra Snezhko-Blotskaya, Viktor Gromov
      Cast: Alik Kachanov (voice), Georgy Millyar (tsar — voice), Valentina Sperlyar (voice) ), Leonid Pirogov (voice), V. Yastrebova (voice)

      Once upon a time there lived a formidable king in the Tsar’s capital. He planned to marry the Tsar Maiden and sent Ivanushka, a peasant son, for her. He would never get to the beauty, if not for the magical helper, the fabulous Little Humpbacked Horse…

      90. The Little Humpbacked Horse (1975)

      Little Humpbacked Horse, 73 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Melodrama
      Director: Ivan Ivanov-Vano
      Cast: Georgy Vitsin (voice), Maria Vinogradova (Ivan — voice), Alexander Khanov (voice), Anatoly Kubakovskiy (Gavrilo — voice), Svetlana Harlap (voice)

      Once upon a time there lived a formidable king in the Tsar’s capital. He planned to marry the Tsar Maiden and sent for her Ivanushka, the peasant’s son. He would never get to the beauty, if not for the magical helper, the fabulous Little Humpbacked Horse…

      91. The Little Humpbacked Horse (1975)

      Little Humpbacked Horse, 63 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Boris Butakov, Ivan Ivanov-Vano
      Cast: Jim Backus (The Tsar — voice), Hans Conried, Erin Moran, Johnny Whitaker

      There was an old man who had three sons. The two older ones are smarter, and the younger Ivan is a fool. Here someone began to trample wheat in their fields! The brothers took turns guarding. The elders slept all night and did not see anyone, and the younger Ivan did not sleep and caught the mare.

      That mare gave birth to three horses, two handsome men, and one little Horse — the Humpbacked Horse. And she ordered Ivan never to part with this skate. So Ivan went with him to the capital, but turned out to be the royal groom. Whatever the tsar does not want, Ivan will do everything. And the Little Humpbacked Horse will help him!

      92. Ice Age 2: Global Warming (2006)

      Ice Age: The Meltdown, 91 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Action, Fantasy
      Director: Carlos Saldana
      Cast: Ray Romano (Manny — voice), John Leguizamo (Sid — voice), Denis Leary (voice) ), Seann William Scott (Crash — voice), Josh Peck (Eddie — voice)

      Diego the saber-toothed tiger, Manfred the mammoth, Scrat the rodent and Sid the sloth have all survived global warming. On the one hand, it’s cool — the icy desert has turned into a real water park where you can take warm baths and frolic under the canopy of the jets. On the other hand, not so much: the rapid flood goes straight to their native valley.

      Now responsible animals will have to save their neighbors from the flood, which is rather problematic — there is absolutely nothing to build an ark from, except from melted snow. But do not worry — the evacuation of various living creatures to a dry place will be no less fussy, funny and successful than the previous operation to return a human cub to the bosom of the family.

      93. Mowgli (1973)

      Mowgli, 90 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family
      Director: Roman Davydov
      Cast: Stepan Bubnov (Balu — voice), Lyudmila Kasatkina (Bagheera — voice), Yuri Khrzhanovsky (White Kobra — voice), Lev Lyubetsky (Akela — voice), Sergey Martinson (Tabaki — voice)

      A story about a boy raised by a pack of wolves. He became his own in the jungle, defeated the enemy — the tiger Sher Khan, performed many more feats and, in the end, went to the people.

      94. Megamind (2010)

      Megamind, 95 minutes

      Genre: Animation, Family, Action, Science Fiction, Comedy
      Director: Tom McGrath
      Cast: Will Ferrell (Megamind — voice), Brad Pitt (Metro Man — voice), Tina Fey (Roxanne Ritchie — voice), Jonah Hill (Tighten — voice), David Cross ( Minion — voice acting)

      Megamind is the most brilliant and unfortunate villain in the world. For many years now, he has been trying to conquer Metro City in a variety of ways. But each such attempt ends in failure due to the fault of a superhero named Metro-Man. But the villain kills the superhero, and suddenly Megamind loses his purpose in life. A supervillain without a superhero.

      The only way out is to create a new superhero, whom he calls Titan. But the Titan decides that being a villain is much more interesting. But he does not want to rule the world, he wants to destroy it. Megamind faces a difficult choice. Will the evil genius be able to become a hero — the savior of mankind.

      95. The Night Before Christmas (1951)

      The night before Christmas, 49 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon
      Director: Valentina Brumberg, Zinaida Brumberg
      Cast: Vladimir Gribkov (voice), Vera Maretskaya (voice), Lilia Gritsenko (voice), Nikolay Gritsenko (voice), Mikhail Yanshenko

      The handsome blacksmith Vakula, in love with the beautiful Oksana, did not stop at nothing: he saddled the devil himself, flew on it to the capital city of St. Petersburg, reached the Empress herself … And all this in order to earn the love of a capricious beauty.

      96. The Adventures of Flick (1998)

      A Bug’s Life, 95 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Comedy, Adventure, Family
      Director: John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton
      Cast: Dave Foley (Flik — voice), Kevin Spacey (Hopper — voice), Julia Louis-Dreyfus (Atta — voice), Hayden Panettiere (Dot — voice), Phyllis Diller (Queen — voice)

      The action of the picture takes place on the island, in a colony of ants. Among them, the inventor Flick stands out. The ants were busy collecting tribute in the form of food for the grasshoppers.

      One day, Flik accidentally threw all the food he had collected in the form of tribute into the water. Grasshoppers as a result of which increased tribute. Flick decided to confront this. Thus began the liberation struggle of ants for independence.

      97. The Nutcracker Prince (1990)

      The Nutcracker Prince, 75 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Adventure, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Paul Schibley
      Cast: Kiefer Sutherland (Nutcracker Prince — voice), Megan Follows (Clara — voice), Mike McDonald (Mouseking — voice), Peter O’Toole (Pantaloon — voice), Phyllis Diller (Mousequeen — voice acting)

      It’s Christmas Eve, Christmas Eve, and all the members of the Stahlbaum family are happily unwrapping their Christmas presents. When the enthusiasm subsided, the seven-year-old Clara receives another, very unusual gift — the mysterious Nutcracker.

      The wicked witch Myshilda has bewitched the nephew of her beloved godfather Drosselmeyer and turned him into a wooden toy — the Nutcracker. To break the spell, the Nutcracker must win Clara’s love and defeat the evil mouse king.

      98. Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas (2003)

      Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas, 86 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Drama, Comedy, Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Romance
      Director: Patrick Gilmour, Tim Johnson
      Cast: Brad Pitt (Sinbad — voice), Catherine Zeta-Jones (voice) , Michelle Pfeiffer (Eris — voice), Joseph Fiennes (Proteus — voice), Dennis Haysbert (Kale — voice)

      The cartoon tells about one of the many adventures of the famous Arabian sailor Sinbad. The adventure begins when Eris, the goddess of Chaos, steals the Book of the World, thus framing Sinbad and making him a criminal.

      Intending to prove his innocence and also save the life of his best friend Proteus Shapershifer, a sailor travels to the realm of Eris, which is infested with terrifying monsters such as giant scorpions, snakes, and 40-foot birds made of ice and snow.

      Even if Sinbad can take out all these monsters, he will also have to deal with Eris’s magic, which has the effect of the Apple of Discord, which has the ability to turn friends into enemies when thrown in their midst. Sinbad is helped in everything by Marina, a friend of Proteus.

      9129eight

      99.

      The Tale of Tsar Saltan (1984)

      The Tale of Tsar Saltan, 69 minutes

      Genre: Cartoon, Family, Fantasy
      Director: Ivan Ivanov-Vano, Lev Milchin
      Cast: Anastasia Zueva (voice), Mikhail Zimin (voice), Alexey Zolotnitsky (voice), Roman Filippov (voice) , A. Pokrovskaya (voice acting)

      Fairy tales are what every person has from childhood. Give yourself a chance to return to the magical world created by A. S. Pushkin.

      The adventures of the brave Tsarevich Gvidon, the beautiful Swan Princess and Tsar Saltan will remind you that love, loyalty and fortitude always win!

      100.

      By alexxlab

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