Indeed.

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from Ireland

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from China

seen from Singapore
Indeed.
what's a zark
One of these:
Cheers.
BHOC: BATTLE OF THE PLANETS
The next big thing to come along for me wasn’t a comic book at all, though it was a super hero adventure. This was the debut of BATTLE OF THE PLANETS on the afternoon of Monday, September 11, 1978. Like everyone my age, I watched a certain number of cartoons every day as available, but most of them were pretty junky. cut-rate animation, basic plots, thing characters–often, character types who…
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Battle of the Planets Episode 41 - The Alien Bigfoot (1978) Sandy Frank Entertainment
People abused the right to use YouTube’s Community Captions
They used it as a way to add spam, memes, & other things no one said in the video.
Because of these people YouTube has decided to remove the option all together.
Over 130 fans of ‘Spring Awakening’ worked together using Community Captions to caption over 400 Deaf West’s Spring Awakening videos.
List of captioned DWSA videos: [X]
People all around the world worked together to make the videos accessible for EVERYONE. Not just for Deaf & Hard of Hearing people, but also people with sensory processing disorders, and people who's language is not the same as the video.
Most the time a video is ONLY captioned because of Community Captions.
With the removal of this feature, billions of videos will not be accessible for ALL people.
Sign the petition to tell @YouTube not to remove Community Captions.
Link to petition: [X]
S03E10 Fugitive Alien (1978/1986)
Just finished watching Mystery Science Theater 3000′s presentation of a little Japanese gem (very little) called TIME OF THE APES. Take a gander at this 1987 baby and you’ll think every one of the 1960′s & 1970′s PLANET OF THE APES films are sheer masterpieces. Not just the first one... which really is.
By the way, this 94 minute feature (which feels longer) was culminated from the 1974 Japanese TV series Saru No Gundan, and it was producer Sandy Frank that made the feature-length version available to North American audiences. He would do the same with other Japanese titles as well.
Kay, as someone who's seen pretty much every Planet of the Apes film (as well as the TV show), I am officially puzzled and befuddled by the existence of this Army of the Apes.
Army of the Apes (Saru No Gundan 猿の軍団) was a Tsuburaya Productions TV series that lasted 26 episodes in 1974.
Though obviously based on the success of the more famous Planet of the Apes films, Army of the Apes is, in many ways, closer to the original novel by Pierre Boulle than the more well known America series. For example, in the original novel, the Apes civilization is much more advances than seen in the movie and the Apes have guns and vehicles whereas for budget reasons, their tech was scaled back in the 20th Century Fox production. Tsuburaya just gave them what was then contemporary cars and helicopters (as well as fashions) to make their tech look more advanced in keeping with the novel.
The plot revolves around 3 humans from our time (well the 1970s) who are cryogenicaly frozen during a massive Earthquake only to be revived in a world where Apes have taken over and humans driven nearly to extinction. It is a very Japanese series though and includes weird things like Ape Ninja and a goofy robot.
One of the things about it that brings it closer to real life Ape behavior though was that the Gorillas were pacifists while the Chimpanzees were the warlike aggressors who wanted to shoot first and ask questions later, leading to conflict between the two and an attempted Chimpanzee coup.
The series is best known in the West for the Sandy Frank (producer of Battle of the Planets and well-known for his dub jobs on the Gamera series) compilation film version Time of the Apes. Because it was a 90 minute condensation of a 26 episode TV series, lots of plot points and things were cut out including the aforementioned Robot and the Ape Ninja.
It was also one of the films riffed in the early days of Mystery Science Theater 3000.