Sorry about that, but I brought it up because there was indeed an uproar over the voice actors being replaced due to that.
Nothing wrong with Canadian voice actors. Tara Strong is awesome, and I did praise the cast of Beast Wars. They were unknown beforehand.
Heck. Lee Tocker is legally blind, but he's one of Ocean Productions's most professional voice actors.
As someone big on cryptids. The stories behind the ogogpogo are interesting, mostly due to what they really are.
People tend to forget moose are dangerous and scary animals.
Man, Nelvana use to have some brilliant animation. They've fallen into the low budget club making cheap flash animated shows.
Come on, admit it. Canadian studios used to have beautifully animated shows and movies. Look at the cult film Rock N Rule.
Speaking of films. We need more animated films aimed at older audiences, besides Sausage Party. They really used to be common.
Gore Verbinski, the director of Rango, said it best:
Nothing wrong with Canadian voice actors. Tara Strong is awesome, and I did praise the cast of Beast Wars. They were unknown beforehand.
Heck. Lee Tocker is legally blind, but he's one of Ocean Productions's most professional voice actors.
As someone big on cryptids. The stories behind the ogogpogo are interesting, mostly due to what they really are.
People tend to forget moose are dangerous and scary animals.
Man, Nelvana use to have some brilliant animation. They've fallen into the low budget club making cheap flash animated shows.
Come on, admit it. Canadian studios used to have beautifully animated shows and movies. Look at the cult film Rock N Rule.
Speaking of films. We need more animated films aimed at older audiences, besides Sausage Party. They really used to be common.
Gore Verbinski, the director of Rango, said it best:
Quote:There are shackles with the budgets and the profit margins. You want to compete with what they're doing at Pixar and DreamWorks. There's a price tag with that just in terms of achieving that quality level. What happened to the Ralph Bakshis of the world? We’re all sitting here talking about family entertainment. Does animation have to be family entertainment? I think at that cost, yes. There's the bull's-eye you have to hit, but when you miss it by a little bit and you do something interesting, the bull's-eye is going to move. Audiences want something new; they just can't articulate what