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Die Peanuts Vol. 10 - What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown? GERMAN Version DVD!
Die Peanuts Vol. 10 - What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown? GERMAN Version DVD!
This is not a Region 1: USA, Canada DVD and will not play in Region 1 DVD players.
The peanuts have long been an integral part of pop history and collective memory of youth around the world. Every day, an unbelievable 355 million people in 75 countries around the world read at least one of the countless comic strips from Charlie Brown's universe. The beginnings were anything but easy.
When Charles M. Schulz offered the first comic strip about his hero Charlie Brown to the local newspapers in the late 1940s, there was almost no interest. It wasn't until the early 1950s that the United Syndicates agency bought Schulz's stories and renamed them Peanuts that the legend began to take off. Initially, the short strips only appeared in a handful of American newspapers, and from 1953 in various comic magazines (at that time still as filler material). By the mid-1950s, the peanuts were well known to produce for the first time specifically for the comic market, and when film producers Lee Mendelsohn and Bill Melendez approached Schulz in 1965, practically every child knew the peanuts.
The result was the almost 20-minute short film Merry Christmas (A Charlie Brown Christmas), which immediately won the American television Oscar (Emmy) for best cartoon. The television station CBS was enthusiastic and the peanuts became an integral part of the program. Up to 1994 a total of 32 so-called specials had been produced, all around 20 minutes long, a whole series of unscheduled short films, four full-length feature films, a Broadway musical and lots of merchandising.
The incredible success of the Peanuts has to do with the unobtrusive humor of the stories, perhaps also with the never-changing, comforting 50s atmosphere. The decisive factor, however, is the unmistakable charm emanating from the inhabitants of this sympathetic universe: the resolute Lucy, the baby Linus, the sensitive Schroeder and of course the hapless Charlie Brown with his strange dog Snoopy. When Charles M. Schulz went into well-deserved retirement in 1999 at the age of 77, the Peanuts also ended. His characters had grown too close to his heart, the connection to their genesis too close, for Schulz to want to sell the rights on.
Episodes:
01 Just be patient
Charlie Brown is watching a football game on TV. He notices a girl who can no longer get out of his head. Hopelessly in love, he does everything to find her ...
02 Farewell to friends
Linus' family has to move because the father is being transferred to another city. Charlie Brown is saddened by this news, because he and Linus are best friends. Does that mean the end of their friendship ...?
03 What did we learn, Charlie Brown?
Charlie Brown is reminded of a trip with the Peanuts through old vacation photos. This takes them to France, where, among other things, they visit the scenes of fateful battles of the two world wars ...
04 The disco beagle
Snoopy impresses Sally with his incredible dance style. Charlie Brown, on the other hand, doubts whether such an extraordinary dog is really right for him ...
Run time : 2 hours and 30 minutes
Package Dimensions : 18.8 x 14.2 x 1 cm
-2.00-0.04
This is not a Region 1: USA, Canada DVD and will not play in Region 1 DVD players.
The peanuts have long been an integral part of pop history and collective memory of youth around the world. Every day, an unbelievable 355 million people in 75 countries around the world read at least one of the countless comic strips from Charlie Brown's universe. The beginnings were anything but easy.
When Charles M. Schulz offered the first comic strip about his hero Charlie Brown to the local newspapers in the late 1940s, there was almost no interest. It wasn't until the early 1950s that the United Syndicates agency bought Schulz's stories and renamed them Peanuts that the legend began to take off. Initially, the short strips only appeared in a handful of American newspapers, and from 1953 in various comic magazines (at that time still as filler material). By the mid-1950s, the peanuts were well known to produce for the first time specifically for the comic market, and when film producers Lee Mendelsohn and Bill Melendez approached Schulz in 1965, practically every child knew the peanuts.
The result was the almost 20-minute short film Merry Christmas (A Charlie Brown Christmas), which immediately won the American television Oscar (Emmy) for best cartoon. The television station CBS was enthusiastic and the peanuts became an integral part of the program. Up to 1994 a total of 32 so-called specials had been produced, all around 20 minutes long, a whole series of unscheduled short films, four full-length feature films, a Broadway musical and lots of merchandising.
The incredible success of the Peanuts has to do with the unobtrusive humor of the stories, perhaps also with the never-changing, comforting 50s atmosphere. The decisive factor, however, is the unmistakable charm emanating from the inhabitants of this sympathetic universe: the resolute Lucy, the baby Linus, the sensitive Schroeder and of course the hapless Charlie Brown with his strange dog Snoopy. When Charles M. Schulz went into well-deserved retirement in 1999 at the age of 77, the Peanuts also ended. His characters had grown too close to his heart, the connection to their genesis too close, for Schulz to want to sell the rights on.
Episodes:
01 Just be patient
Charlie Brown is watching a football game on TV. He notices a girl who can no longer get out of his head. Hopelessly in love, he does everything to find her ...
02 Farewell to friends
Linus' family has to move because the father is being transferred to another city. Charlie Brown is saddened by this news, because he and Linus are best friends. Does that mean the end of their friendship ...?
03 What did we learn, Charlie Brown?
Charlie Brown is reminded of a trip with the Peanuts through old vacation photos. This takes them to France, where, among other things, they visit the scenes of fateful battles of the two world wars ...
04 The disco beagle
Snoopy impresses Sally with his incredible dance style. Charlie Brown, on the other hand, doubts whether such an extraordinary dog is really right for him ...
Run time : 2 hours and 30 minutes
Package Dimensions : 18.8 x 14.2 x 1 cm
-2.00-0.04





