Homepage
Advertisment
< Hot Mouse Pads
Choose your language:
English
Shoping
Cart
now in your cart  0 items
  Specials
  Search
  Contact Us
  Create an account
  Customer Login
currensies

  Animals



  Autos



  Entertainment



  Fantasy



  Flags



  Flowers



  Games



  Panoramas



  War



  Other

  
Advanced Search
german   fantasy   ron   
united   bird   cross   
bridge   posters   picture   
moon   
Frankenstein Large Mouse Pad NEW
Frankenstein Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
Design0628 Large Mouse Pad NEW
Design0628 Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
30th Birthday Large Mouse Pad NEW
30th Birthday Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
Catgirl2 Large Mouse Pad NEW
Catgirl2 Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
Jan van eyck Maddonna with Chancellor Rolin Large Mouse Pad NEW
Jan van eyck Maddonna with Chancellor Rolin Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
Kitten and Ball of Yarn Cat Lover Large Mouse Pad NEW
Kitten and Ball of Yarn Cat Lover Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
JESUS Large Mouse Pad NEW
JESUS Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
Santa Clauses Against The Wall Large Mouse Pad NEW
Santa Clauses Against The Wall Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
68 Large Mouse Pad NEW
68 Large Mouse Pad NEW
$0.99
This is a brand new high quality custom 9.25" x ...
Buy Now Buy Now
 
 
 
 
 
 
Home    My account    New products    Shopping cart    Checkout    Privacy policy
Copyright © 2008 HotMousePads.Com  

Here is the beginning of Baron Prásil from 1961 by Karel Zeman. This movie is totally amazing. Its creepy yet beautiful and practically impossible to find. There was a DVD made in Japan of this, and sold out immediately, and I hear there are only 50-100 copies.

Tags: Baron Prasil 1961 Karel Zemen Munchausen stop animation
Temeraf, Peci Uhercik, Martin Uhercik, Dusan Tvorik Kamera a Rezia: Duro Cerny

Tags: rock
Rozhovor s Jardou Prášilem

Tags: Jaroslav Prášil
Baron Prášil (1961) by Karel Zeman http://img24.imagevenue.com/img.php?image=27197_prasil_122_778lo.jpg

Tags: karel zeman prasil munchhausen animation czech
Ecce homo-race week

Tags: Fana Prasil
interview whith BK NH Ostrava player/rozhovor s hracem BK NH Ostrava

Tags: Jaroslav Prasil Ostrava basket czech
Záznam z Novoročního koncertu 2008. Diriguje Marek Prášil. Bicí: Magda Vyoralová, Václav Pálka, Werner Bernatík. Recording from the New Year Concert 2008. Conductor: Marek Prášil Percussion: Magda Vyoralová, Václav Pálka, Werner Bernatík

Tags: májovák majovak karviná czech symphonic band wind orchestra dechový orchestr ted huggens percussion
Záznam ze zahajujícího koncertu Máje nad Olzou v Karviné, 1. V. 2008. Diriguje Marek Prášil. Karol Pádivý: Hategana (3rd Romanian Dance) Recording from the opening concert of the "Máj nad Olzou" festival, 1st May 2008. Conductor: Marek Prášil.

Tags: májovák majovak karviná wind orchestra symphonic band dechový orchestr slovak music romanian
[:] only those of love will survive and presenting the jewels of old czech cinematography

Tags: Dousk Robot repertoaaar Baron Prasil Adela Jeste Nevecerela Tajemny Hrad Karpatech
Nemůžu si odpustit to sem dát, je to prostě skvělýýýýý xDD Übrigens - die scheiß Mütze hab ich seit der 4.Klasse, Fabi Otter, weißte noch wo wir mit unsarer Zwilingscap Piraten und Robben gespielt haben? xD Die wurde mir gelinkt und seit dem hab ich diehier von Adidas :D:D:DD

Tags: Na silnici do Prášil xD ;-) Jermar Jermář kytara Guitar Gitarre
Pohanský rituál z Prášil ..

Tags: Beltine Psycho natural people music
Krátký videorozhovor s Jardou Prášilem po čtvrtém semifinále s Prostějovem

Tags: Jeroslav Prášil
Screwed up in the end by call!

Tags: Sunil Prasil Seven Impossible Days Song Call
Prasil Logo as The Pixar Animation Studios Logo. All Rights Reserved

Tags: Prasil
Karel Zeman (November 3, 1910, Ostroměř near Nová Paka, then Austria-Hungary - April 5, 1989, Prague, then Czechoslovakia) was a Czech animator and filmmaker. He is considered the co-founder of the Czech animated film. He started to be interested in puppet theatre while studying at business school. Soon after, he decided to study at the Art School of Advertising in France, and after graduating he took a job with an advertising studio in Marseilles. His first experience with animated film was making an ad for soup. When he returned home he continued working in advertising, now for big Czech firms Bata and Tatra. Zeman showed a sample of his work to the filmmaker Elmar Klos, and was offered a job at the animation studio in Zlín. He accepted the job in 1943. Once there, he met animator Hermína Týrlová, who had just finished animating the all-time children's favorite Ferda Mravenec (Ferda the Ant, based on a story by Ondřej Sekora). Together, Zeman and Týrlova made the animated film Vánoční sen (Christmas Dream) and won the award for Best Animation at the 1946 festival in Cannes. Zeman was well on his way to becoming a world-renowned animator. The first project Zeman did on his own was a popular series of short films about a character named Mr. Prokouk. These humorous stories revolved around the problems of everyday life: Mr. Prokouk at the Office, Mr. Prokouk the Inventor, and so on. Zeman's first longer film was Král Lávra (King Lavra, based on a poem by Karel Havlíček Borovský), which earned him a National Award in 1950. In 1955 Zeman made his first film combining live actors, animation, and special effects— Cesta do pravěku (Journey to Prehistory), a work that stunned the world. Four years later, he released his masterpiece Vynález zkázy (The Fabulous World of Jules Verne), opening a new world of possibilities that he explored in his other adaptations of Jules Verne novels — Ukradena vzducholod (Stolen Airship) and Na kometě (Off on the Comet) - and classic stories such as Baron Prášil (Baron Munchhausen), Bláznova kronika (The Jester's Tale), and many more. Zeman used sets painted in the style of Victorian illustrations (mainly engravings by Gustave Dore), and then had live actors wandering through animated settings. The great success of these science fiction and fantasy features is a tribute to Zeman's sense of humor and storytelling abilities, as well as his technique and originality. Though most of Zeman's films are meant for children, they possess a sophisticated wit and visual style that enchants adults as well. His most unusual film remains the short Inspiration (1949). Here Zeman employed an astonishing technique, using series of glass figurines to produce remarkably smooth animation with an exquisite sense of timing, movement, and narrative structure. Another of Zeman's feature-length animated films, Pohádky tisíce a jedné noci (Tales of One Thousand and One Nights), consists of seven short stories about Sinbad the sailor. Later, in Krabat, čarodějův učeň (Krabat - The Sorcerer's Apprentice, 1975), and the Grimm Brothers' fairy tale O Honzíkovi a Mařence (Hansel and Gretel, 1980), he returned to classical forms of animation. He died before the Velvet Revolution in Prague.

Tags: karel zeman czech childrens mr prokouk king lavra krabat sorcerer special effects prague jesters tale john and mary
Karel Zeman (November 3, 1910, Ostroměř near Nová Paka, then Austria-Hungary - April 5, 1989, Prague, then Czechoslovakia) was a Czech animator and filmmaker. He is considered the co-founder of the Czech animated film. He started to be interested in puppet theatre while studying at business school. Soon after, he decided to study at the Art School of Advertising in France, and after graduating he took a job with an advertising studio in Marseilles. His first experience with animated film was making an ad for soup. When he returned home he continued working in advertising, now for big Czech firms Bata and Tatra. Zeman showed a sample of his work to the filmmaker Elmar Klos, and was offered a job at the animation studio in Zlín. He accepted the job in 1943. Once there, he met animator Hermína Týrlová, who had just finished animating the all-time children's favorite Ferda Mravenec (Ferda the Ant, based on a story by Ondřej Sekora). Together, Zeman and Týrlova made the animated film Vánoční sen (Christmas Dream) and won the award for Best Animation at the 1946 festival in Cannes. Zeman was well on his way to becoming a world-renowned animator. The first project Zeman did on his own was a popular series of short films about a character named Mr. Prokouk. These humorous stories revolved around the problems of everyday life: Mr. Prokouk at the Office, Mr. Prokouk the Inventor, and so on. Zeman's first longer film was Král Lávra (King Lavra, based on a poem by Karel Havlíček Borovský), which earned him a National Award in 1950. In 1955 Zeman made his first film combining live actors, animation, and special effects— Cesta do pravěku (Journey to Prehistory), a work that stunned the world. Four years later, he released his masterpiece Vynález zkázy (The Fabulous World of Jules Verne), opening a new world of possibilities that he explored in his other adaptations of Jules Verne novels — Ukradena vzducholod (Stolen Airship) and Na kometě (Off on the Comet) - and classic stories such as Baron Prášil (Baron Munchhausen), Bláznova kronika (The Jester's Tale), and many more. Zeman used sets painted in the style of Victorian illustrations (mainly engravings by Gustave Dore), and then had live actors wandering through animated settings. The great success of these science fiction and fantasy features is a tribute to Zeman's sense of humor and storytelling abilities, as well as his technique and originality. Though most of Zeman's films are meant for children, they possess a sophisticated wit and visual style that enchants adults as well. His most unusual film remains the short Inspiration (1949). Here Zeman employed an astonishing technique, using series of glass figurines to produce remarkably smooth animation with an exquisite sense of timing, movement, and narrative structure. Another of Zeman's feature-length animated films, Pohádky tisíce a jedné noci (Tales of One Thousand and One Nights), consists of seven short stories about Sinbad the sailor. Later, in Krabat, čarodějův učeň (Krabat - The Sorcerer's Apprentice, 1975), and the Grimm Brothers' fairy tale O Honzíkovi a Mařence (Hansel and Gretel, 1980), he returned to classical forms of animation. He died before the Velvet Revolution in Prague.

Tags: karel zeman czech childrens mr prokouk king lavra krabat sorcerer special effects prague jesters tale john and mary
Tak tady jsme chvíli něvěděli, kde jsme. Kousek od Prášil :)

Tags: skutr Plzeň Šumava výlet
Primeiros "passos" do Yan

Tags: Yan Hiromori Prasil
Karel Zeman (November 3, 1910, Ostroměř near Nová Paka, then Austria-Hungary - April 5, 1989, Prague, then Czechoslovakia) was a Czech animator and filmmaker. He is considered the co-founder of the Czech animated film. He started to be interested in puppet theatre while studying at business school. Soon after, he decided to study at the Art School of Advertising in France, and after graduating he took a job with an advertising studio in Marseilles. His first experience with animated film was making an ad for soup. When he returned home he continued working in advertising, now for big Czech firms Bata and Tatra. Zeman showed a sample of his work to the filmmaker Elmar Klos, and was offered a job at the animation studio in Zlín. He accepted the job in 1943. Once there, he met animator Hermína Týrlová, who had just finished animating the all-time children's favorite Ferda Mravenec (Ferda the Ant, based on a story by Ondřej Sekora). Together, Zeman and Týrlova made the animated film Vánoční sen (Christmas Dream) and won the award for Best Animation at the 1946 festival in Cannes. Zeman was well on his way to becoming a world-renowned animator. The first project Zeman did on his own was a popular series of short films about a character named Mr. Prokouk. These humorous stories revolved around the problems of everyday life: Mr. Prokouk at the Office, Mr. Prokouk the Inventor, and so on. Zeman's first longer film was Král Lávra (King Lavra, based on a poem by Karel Havlíček Borovský), which earned him a National Award in 1950. In 1955 Zeman made his first film combining live actors, animation, and special effects— Cesta do pravěku (Journey to Prehistory), a work that stunned the world. Four years later, he released his masterpiece Vynález zkázy (The Fabulous World of Jules Verne), opening a new world of possibilities that he explored in his other adaptations of Jules Verne novels — Ukradena vzducholod (Stolen Airship) and Na kometě (Off on the Comet) - and classic stories such as Baron Prášil (Baron Munchhausen), Bláznova kronika (The Jester's Tale), and many more. Zeman used sets painted in the style of Victorian illustrations (mainly engravings by Gustave Dore), and then had live actors wandering through animated settings. The great success of these science fiction and fantasy features is a tribute to Zeman's sense of humor and storytelling abilities, as well as his technique and originality. Though most of Zeman's films are meant for children, they possess a sophisticated wit and visual style that enchants adults as well. His most unusual film remains the short Inspiration (1949). Here Zeman employed an astonishing technique, using series of glass figurines to produce remarkably smooth animation with an exquisite sense of timing, movement, and narrative structure. Another of Zeman's feature-length animated films, Pohádky tisíce a jedné noci (Tales of One Thousand and One Nights), consists of seven short stories about Sinbad the sailor. Later, in Krabat, čarodějův učeň (Krabat - The Sorcerer's Apprentice, 1975), and the Grimm Brothers' fairy tale O Honzíkovi a Mařence (Hansel and Gretel, 1980), he returned to classical forms of animation. He died before the Velvet Revolution in Prague.

Tags: karel zeman czech childrens mr prokouk king lavra krabat sorcerer special effects prague jesters tale john and mary
Pages:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Sponsors