Inadvands
Boring, over-political, tech fuzed mess
Beystiman
It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
Hadrina
The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Scarlet
The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
brandon burns
I always enjoyed watching The Little Lulu Show when it was on HBO, sure the jokes are corny but it was still all in good fun! the whole series were really based on John Stanly's comics of the 1950s, but this show is really supposed to take place in the 90s but all the characters still were their old fashion clothes, go figure? anyway, you had Lulu Moppet during a comedy stand up routine in each episode, you know just like what Jerry Seinfeld did on his TV show, some of the kids you could basely explore their personality's.For example, you had Tubby the fat kid and leader of the boys clubhouse, Wilbur the rich and snobby one, Gloria the one girl who thinks she's the prettiest girl in the whole neighborhood, Alvin the little bratty kid, Annie who's not to bright and so on.But personally I still thought this was a great children's show! and I sometimes wish it should get rebooted some day.
kamskans
This is one TV show that I wont forget that easily. Every day when I came back from school I Really wanted to watch simply because of the many Intelligent jokes layered through out the show. Also this is perhaps the only cartoon show I've seen that has a stand up comedy sequence where Lulu Is the star. This show is basically about kids in a neighborhood and their daily happenings. Lulu is shown to be a very intelligent girl and is very likable. She has lots of friends and another notable character in the show is Tubby. A must watch for every one. I'd recommend it to every one simply for the pure fun involved in it. I LOVED EVERY SECOND OF THE SHOW!
stareyes24
Yesterday, my mother brought me a DVD featuring Little Lulu cartoons on it. So, my first reaction to it was maybe they are they old ones, when I read the back of the DVD it said it featured the voice of Tracy Ullman as Little Lulu and I thought to myself , it was probably a marketing technique to get people to buy the DVD (after all, it was a generic DVD company known as Genius Entertainment selling the product and it was only $1.00). So my cousin and I were all excited about the DVD, come to find out it was the old Little Lulu cartoons that were badly edited and unrestored to their original versions. I sadly disappointed and I realized that I liked the mid-ninties cartoons better. Lulu had more personality in the latter versions and the characters were more developed and likable. So until the original cartoons are restored to their original glory, I'm sticking to the mid-ninties version of "Little Lulu" even though the plots are pretty much from the 1930's-1960's.
Tagimby
These cartoons (many of them, at least) are animated versions of the Little Lulu comic books from the 1940's and 50's. They used the stories unchanged, except for minor adaptations in the wording. John Stanley, who's been dead for years already, wrote the stories. They didn't have to credit him, because he did it as an employee of the comic book publisher and was never credited in the first place. But I wish it were better known that these are 50-to-60-year-old stories, because that makes it even more remarkable how good they are. The "kids are smart" theme, and especially the "girls are smart" theme, were already popular ideas back then, but weren't found in the media, except in those and a few other early ground-breaking comic book series. The Beauty Contest, the Snowball War, the Business Girl (lemonade story), and the Picnic Pirates--these were among the many examples of Stanley's genius to be found on this show.