[HD] Metro E Line (Expo) - P2020 Full Cab Ride from Santa Monica to 7th Street/Metro Center

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  • čas přidán 8. 05. 2024
  • Welcome aboard the Metro E Line (Expo)! This train's final destination is 7th Street/Metro Center in Downtown LA.
    Back in 2018 while returning from a day trip to Santa Monica, I had the chance to film out the 'railfan window' looking into the cab of the Nippon Sharyo P2020 LRV from the origination point of Downtown Santa Monica to the train's final destination of 7th Street/Metro Center. As the Nippon Sharyo P2020s have already retired and will begin to be scrapped within the following weeks, I figured it was appropriate to upload an Expo Line cab ride. Thanks for watching and enjoy the sights, sounds, and exhilaration of riding through cities/areas such as Santa Monica, Culver City, West LA, Expo Park, and Downtown LA traveling at speeds of up to 55mph!
    Station Timestamps:
    01:12 - Downtown Santa Monica
    03:06 - 17th St/SMC
    06:33 - 26th St/Bergamot
    09:27 - Expo/Bundy
    11:34 - Expo/Sepulveda
    13:01 - Westwood/Rancho Park
    16:06 - Palms
    17:45 - Culver City
    19:55 - La Cienega/Jefferson
    21:54 - Expo/La Brea
    23:11 - Farmdale
    24:39 - Expo/Crenshaw
    28:58 - Expo/Western
    31:28 - Expo/Vermont
    32:57 - Expo Park/USC
    35:14 - Jefferson/USC
    37:15 - LATTC/Ortho Institute
    42:39 - Pico
    45:23 - 7th Street/Metro Center
    © 2021 LARailProductions
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 55

  • @LARailProductions
    @LARailProductions  Před 3 lety +5

    Station Timestamps:
    01:12 - Downtown Santa Monica
    03:06 - 17th St/SMC
    06:33 - 26th St/Bergamot
    09:27 - Expo/Bundy
    11:34 - Expo/Sepulveda
    13:01 - Westwood/Rancho Park
    16:06 - Palms
    17:45 - Culver City
    19:55 - La Cienega/Jefferson
    21:54 - Expo/La Brea
    23:11 - Farmdale
    24:39 - Expo/Crenshaw
    28:58 - Expo/Western
    31:28 - Expo/Vermont
    32:57 - Expo Park/USC
    35:14 - Jefferson/USC
    37:15 - LATTC/Ortho Institute
    42:39 - Pico
    45:23 - 7th Street/Metro Center

  • @MFPTransitVideos
    @MFPTransitVideos Před 3 lety +10

    Great cab view! I miss riding these oldies on the Expo Line.

    • @LARailProductions
      @LARailProductions  Před 3 lety +4

      Thanks!

    • @mohamadfaiz6935
      @mohamadfaiz6935 Před rokem

      @@LARailProductionsP865s and P2020s Nippon Sharyo Rolling Stocks had continue from 2021-present would beat Kinkisharyo p3010s

  • @jarrietfair6373
    @jarrietfair6373 Před rokem +2

    I remember this line the old southern pacific Santa Monica branch line back in the 70s

  • @darcman32
    @darcman32 Před 2 lety +3

    Might want to give the operator as cup of coffee

  • @TheFamousRleon
    @TheFamousRleon Před 3 lety +7

    Gladly you caught these on Expo before they disappeared for ten months.

  • @transitfanaviationfanrailf9249

    I love the cab views nice video

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    9200?
    Exteriors of the Maroon Cartoon studios were shot at Ren-Mar Studios in Hollywood, California.
    Judge Doom picks up a record and reads its label: "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down". Then he says, "quite a loony selection for a bunch of drunken reprobates." The song "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" is the familiar theme song for the Looney Tunes cartoons.
    Visual effects supervisor Ken Ralston donned the Judge Doom costume for the scene where Eddie Valiant shoots cartoon bullets at Doom in Toontown, as Doom runs away from Valiant.
    The song "Smile, Darn Ya, Smile," which the Toons sing when Eddie Valiant first arrives in Toontown and near the end of the movie, is featured in an eponymous 1931 Warner Brothers Merrie Melodie Smile Darn Ya Smile (1931), starring foxes Foxy and Roxy.
    Some versions of the movie include an extra scene (called the "Pig Head Sequence"): As punishment for intervening with Judge Doom's plan, Eddie Valiant is driven into Toontown, ambushed by the weasels during the night, and has a large pig's head "tooned" onto his. He runs home screaming and washes it off in the shower, presumably with a Dip-like substance. during which Jessica walked into his apartment. Zemeckis stated that despite not wanting to do it since it was the first completed scene for the film, he had to remove it because it slowed the movie down. The scene was cut from the original theatrical release and most home media prints, but did appear in theatrical trailers, LaserDisc releases, and its premiere television broadcast on CBS, as well as being a bonus feature on most DVDs. A scene cut from the theatrical version where Jessica rolls up her dress to reveal her stockings as she sits cross-legged is also included in this sequence.
    Eddie enters a Toontown men's room which has the graffiti "For a Good Time, call Allyson Wonderland" in the background. In the original theatrical version, a phone number was visible beside the words-rumored to be either Michael Eisner's or Jeffrey Katzenberg's. The phone number was removed for the VHS and Laserdisc releases.
    Although the film's title is said in the form of a question, a question mark doesn't appear in the title, as this is considered bad luck in the industry, according to superstition.
    Several voice actors make cameos as the voice of the character(s) they have played before. These are Tony Anselmo (Donald Duck), Wayne Allwine (Mickey Mouse), and Mel Blanc (Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester, and Tweety Bird). But most noticeable is Mae Questell as Betty Boop. Mae did Betty's voice from 1930 - 1938, which the character was retired in 1939. Betty even points this out herself. Recently though, the character has re-emerged, regaining her popularity with meet-and-greet opportunities and a retail location at Walt Disney World's competing park, Universal Orlando Resort.[11]
    During production, one of the biggest challenges faced by the makers of the film was how to get the cartoon characters to realistically interact with real on-set props. This was ultimately accomplished in two different ways. Certain props (such as Baby Herman's cigar or the plates Roger smashes over his head) were moved on-set via motion control machines hooked up to an operator who would move the objects in exactly the desired manner. Then, in post, the character was simply drawn 'over' the machine. The other way of doing it was by using puppeteers. This is most clearly seen in the scene in the Ink & Paint Club. The glasses held by the octopus bartender were, in fact, being controlled by puppeteers from above, while the trays carried by the penguin waiters were on sticks being controlled from below - both the wires and the sticks were simply removed in post and the cartoons added in.
    The song played by Daffy and Donald Duck in the Ink and Paint Club is the Second Hungarian Rhapsody by Franz Liszt, a song featured in numerous cartoons, including the Oscar winning Tom and Jerry short The Cat Concerto (1947) and the Bugs Bunny Merrie Melodie Rhapsody Rabbit (1946).
    Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner also appear silhouetted on the elevator door as it goes up. They later reappear at the end of the film to see Doom's remainings and during the song "Smile Darn Ya Smile". In the same scene you can also see Wile E. Coyote with his arm affectionately around the Road Runner's shoulders, an incredibly sweet contrast to the attitude normally portrayed in their shorts.
    Felix the Cat's face appears as the masks of tragedy and comedy on the keystone of the bridge that leads to the entrance of Toontown.
    To create the animation, over 85,000 hand-inked and painted cells were created and composited with the live-action backdrops, live-action characters, and hand-animated tone mattes (shading) and cast shadows using optical film printers. No computer animation (CG) was used in creating the animations. Some scenes involved up to 100 individual film elements. Any live-action that had to be later composited was shot in VistaVision to take advantage of the double-area frame of the horizontal 35mm format. The finished film thus does not suffer from the increased grain that plagued previous live-action/animation combos such as Mary Poppins (1964).
    AWD?!

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    6903?
    "Hang on for the comedy that goes to infinity and beyond!"
    -Tagline
    Toy Story is Pixar's first feature film which was produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures in US theaters on November 22, 1995. It was written by John Lasseter, Pete Docter, Joss Whedon, Andrew Stanton, Joel Cohen, and Alec Sokolow, and directed by Lasseter as well. Toy Story stars the voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Don Rickles, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Jim Varney, Annie Potts, R. Lee Ermey, John Morris, Laurie Metcalf, Erik von Detten, and Sarah Freeman, and is also the first full-length theatrically-released feature film to be made entirely with computer-generated imagery and the music was written by Randy Newman.
    The film was so successful that a sequel, Toy Story 2, was in theaters November 24, 1999. Eleven years later, Toy Story received a second sequel, Toy Story 3 which was released on June 18, 2010. Both sequels were hits and garnered critical acclaim similar to the first. Leading up to the premiere of Toy Story 3, as part of its promotion, Toy Story and Toy Story 2 were re-released in theaters as a double feature in 3-D on October 2, 2009. A third sequel, Toy Story 4, was released on June 21, 2019.
    In Disney's earning call on February 8, 2023, CEO Bob Iger announced that work was underway on another Toy Story film.
    Set in a world where toys come alive, the world's first computer-animated movie focuses on the toys of Andy Davis and centers on his favorite toy, a pull-string cowboy doll named Woody, worrying about being replaced by Andy's newest toy, a space ranger named Buzz Lightyear. When Woody and Buzz are suddenly trapped in the house of Andy's toy-killing neighbor Sid Phillips and his vicious dog Scud, they must work together to escape if they ever want to return to Andy's house.
    The film starts when a bright 10-year-old[4] boy named Andy Davis playing with his toys, such as a Mr. Potato Head toy, a plastic dinosaur toy named Rex, and his favorite toy Woody, a cowboy doll. He takes Woody into the living room and plays with him some more, with a short interruption talking to his mom about his birthday party later that day and the upcoming move to a new house. After playing with Woody, Andy starts helping his mother by carrying his baby sister Molly to her. While he's away, all of the toys come to life. Woody wakes up finding out that Andy's birthday party is today and then calls his fellow toys to a staff meeting. The meeting begins with Woody asking if each of the toys has picked a moving buddy just to be prepared for the move for one week. He then informs the toys that Andy's birthday party has been moved to today, causing the toys to get very anxious about whether they get replaced or not. Woody claims that it only matters that he and his fellow toys are here for Andy. Hamm interrupts the staff meeting telling the other toys that Andy's birthday guests have arrived. Out the window, they see the guests carrying Andy's birthday presents, still worried about getting replaced.
    Woody sends Sarge and his team of plastic soldiers downstairs with a baby monitor to report on the presents Andy receives. Although Andy receives games and clothes from his friends, his final present from his mom is the recently-released Buzz Lightyear action figure, and Andy is so excited he shoves Woody off the bed to make room for his newest toy before going downstairs for the rest of the party. Woody tries to shake off the fact that he was pushed aside as he and the rest of the toys greet Buzz, who shows off his many features like a laser light and wings. It turns out that Buzz doesn't know he's a toy, instead believing he's an actual Space Ranger who needs to fix his ship (which is actually the box he came in). Over the next few days, the other toys in the room prefer spending time with the newcomer making Woody feel jealous. This is intensified further when Andy begins playing with Buzz even more and replaces the cowboy decorations in his room with Buzz-themed ones.
    Sometime later, Ms. Davis takes Andy and Molly on a trip to the space-themed Pizza Planet restaurant. Andy asks if he can bring any toys, and she agrees to let him take one. Woody, knowing Andy will choose Buzz, plans to trap him in a gap behind Andy's desk by using RC so Andy won't find him and will have to take Woody instead, but the plan goes badly wrong when Woody accidentally knocks Buzz out the window. When the other toys, including Mr. Potato Head, learn of Woody's actions, most of them (except Bo and Slinky) think Woody tried to kill Buzz out of jealousy. They then try to attack him, but Woody is rescued when Andy, who is unable to find Buzz, decides to take Woody on the trip instead.
    At a stop at a Dinoco gas station to refuel the car, Woody after pondering how he's going to convince the toys that the whole thing was an accident finds that Buzz grabbed ahold of the family's minivan and is with them. After a conversation, the two toys begin to fight, knocking each other out of the minivan, and are left behind when it drives away. The two then have a heated argument underneath a tanker truck, and after briefly lashing out at the deluded space ranger, Woody convinces Buzz to hitch a lift on a Pizza Planet Truck in order to return to Andy.
    Still thinking he's a real space ranger, Buzz believes that Pizza Planet is a spaceport. He climbs into a toy crane game, thinking that it's a spaceship that will take him to Emperor Zurg's location. Woody, knowing that he can't return to Andy's room without Buzz, goes in after him, but the two are eventually found by Sid Phillips, who lives next door to Andy and is known to torture and destroy toys just for fun.
    Left alone in Sid's room, Woody and Buzz come upon a group of mis-matched toys, the results of Sid's many experiments. Woody and Buzz react in fear, thinking that the mismatched toys are man-eating cannibals. Meanwhile, at Andy's house, the toys continue to look for Buzz in the bushes. But when Andy and his mother come home, Andy notices that Woody's gone. The other toys wonder what has become of the two. Some are worried for both Buzz and Woody, while others express their hope that Woody has met a bad end. The next morning at Sid's house, Woody and Buzz, (the former having been burned on the forehead by Sid using a magnifying glass), try to escape, only to run into Sid's dog, Scud. Eventually, escaping from Sid's room, Buzz watches a TV commercial for the line of toys of himself and realizes that Woody was right about him being a toy this whole time, and not a real space ranger. However, in one final desperate attempt to fly, Buzz tries to fly out of the window by jumping off the guardrail of the stairs on the floor to fly out of Sid's house, only to fall to the floor, losing his left arm in the process. He is found by Sid's younger sister, Hannah, who takes him away to put him in her tea party.
    Woody finally finds Buzz in Hannah's room, disguised as Mrs. Nesbitt and attending a tea party. While Woody formulates a plan of escape, Buzz is too depressed to care. When Woody throws a string of Christmas lights across the way to the toys in Andy's room, Buzz refuses to back him up; Woody tries to use Buzz's detached arm in a desperate attempt to convince Andy's toys that Buzz is with him, but when they see through this act, they take it as evidence that Woody truly did murder Buzz and leave him in disgust for his duplicity. The Mutant Toys then return and swarm over Buzz, and Woody finds that they have repaired him and reconnected his arm. However, before Woody can make friends with them, Sid returns with his new acquisition, a firework rocket. He decides to blow up Woody with it, but cannot find him as Woody hides in a milk crate. Sid then decides to launch Buzz into space instead but is stymied by rainfall. He unknowingly traps Woody in the crate by putting a heavy toolbox on top, and plans to go ahead in the morning.
    AWD?!

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    9202?
    There were over 40 drafts of the script, including drafts that had either Jessica Rabbit or Baby Herman as the villain.
    In early drafts for the film, Judge Doom was revealed to be Man, as in the early drafts Eddie mentions offhand to Roger that the person who killed Teddy was probably the one who killed Bambi's mother. However this dialogue was cut from the film for reasons yet-unknown.
    It was also originally going to have be a toon gopher Doom dipped instead of a toon shoe. But this was changed as the crew feel it was too brutal for a family film.
    The ending scene was originally going to have Doom reveal his Toon mouth and red hands with long nails.
    In a deleted scene, when Doom attempts to Dip Roger at the bar, the patrons protest that Roger should at least have a proper trial. The judge agrees, then pulls out a suitcase from which jumps a group of kangaroos that hold out signs reading "Y-O-U A-R-E G-U-I-L-T-Y" (a literal Kangaroo Court, in other words).
    Judge Doom never blinks once throughout the entire movie; this was really director Robert Zemeckis' idea.
    The movie's line "I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way." was voted as the #83 of "The 100 Greatest Movie Lines" by Premiere in 2007.
    Among the song selections on the Acme "Select-a-Tune" (the device that Eddie "sings" to in order to make the weasels laugh themselves to death) are "Jolson Medley", "Merry-Go-Round Broke Down", "Broadway Selection", and "Mickey's Melody".
    The first test audience was comprised mostly of 18 and 19 year olds, who hated it. After nearly the entire audience walked out of the screening, Robert Zemeckis, who had final cut, said he wasn't going to change a thing.
    Full-size rubber models of Roger Rabbit used as stand-ins so that the human actors could get a feeling for the size and shape of their imaginary costar.
    The Ink and Paint Club's policy of only letting toons onto the premises as entertainers and employees, not as customers or audience members, is a reference to the real-life Cotton Club, which, along with many other segregated clubs before the Civil Rights movement, only allowed Black people to enter as performers. This cleverly ties into the theme of racial and ethnic discrimination throughout the film.
    Despite his bigotry of Toons, Eddie seems to get along well with Tweety, Bugs, Mickey and Betty, and warms up to Roger over the course of the film as well. Eddie even has a Betty Boop figure on his desk, implying that she is a toon that he fondly remembers from his childhood and that he still values their friendship despite the culture of the time.
    The truck full of "stuff" (bowling balls, pianos, anvils, fireworks, bulb horns, joke sets, TNT, etc.) that Eddie Valiant crashes into when he returns to Toontown is labeled "ACME Overused Gags".
    Chuck Jones received a credit as "animation consultant" but disavowed the movie forever after, complaining that there was something wrong with a movie where the live-action hero got more sympathy than the animated-cartoon star did.
    Jessica Rabbit's look was designed after Veronica Lake. Jessica even sports the Lake trademark "Peek-a-Boo" hairstyle.
    Bob Hoskins said that, for two weeks after seeing the movie, his young son wouldn't talk to him. When finally asked why, his son said he couldn't believe his father would work with cartoon characters (such as Bugs Bunny and Donald Duck) and not let him meet them.
    The piano duet between Donald Duck and Daffy Duck was storyboarded by animation director Richard Williams and Chuck Jones, who was working as a consultant. Williams drew Donald, while Jones drew Daffy.
    A brief sequence was prepared to test the techniques used to combine live-action with animation. The footage, which showed Eddie Valiant (played by another actor) walking in an alley with Roger Rabbit, touched on all the challenges expected of the production - shading on the cartoon characters, interaction with the live-action actors and environment, matching with the constantly moving camera, etc. The brief, one-minute film, budgeted at $100,000, convinced the filmmakers that the effects could create the illusion of cartoons and live actors occupying the same reality.
    Robert Zemeckis keeps the stop-motion model of the flattened Judge Doom in his office.
    Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner, who briefly appear in the final "roll call" shot, actually had not been created at the time the movie was set (1947). They first appeared in 1949 (2 years later). The characters were given a small cameo anyway, at the insistence of Steven Spielberg, along with many other anachronistic Toons (for reasons yet unknown).
    When Valiant confronts Maroon and sprays him with a seltzer bottle a Roger Rabbit poster can be seen in the background.
    The case where Valiant keeps his cartoon gun is inscribed "Thanks for getting me out of the Hoosegow - Yosemite Sam".
    When Angelo tells Judge Doom in the bar that he knows where the rabbit is, he points to the empty seat next to him and says "Well, say hello, Harvey". Harvey is a 6-foot invisible rabbit from the stage play with the same name (as well as the movie Harvey (1950)).
    The tunnel was also used in the Back to the Future movies (as discussed in the audio commentary of the 2 disc DVD).
    The argument between Eddie Valiant and Roger Rabbit in the bar concerning Roger not wanting a drink is a remake of a classic cartoon argument switch. This reverse psychology technique was used in the Bugs Bunny/Daffy Duck/Elmer Fudd cartoons "Rabbit Fire" and "Rabbit Seasoning." Bugs and Daffy would argue back and forth as to which hunting season it is (Rabbit/Duck Season) Bugs would trick Daffy into saying "Duck Season" by saying "Rabbit Season."
    AWD?!

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    172034?
    In Toy Story 4, he hides his disappointment due to Bonnie not playing with him as often. He is shown to get stressed due to Forky.
    Woody is a slender man and fair-skinned in plastic. He has brown eyes, hair hand-painted in brown that is attached to his head in plastic, rosy cheeks, thin brown eyebrows, a yellow shirt with red square outlines, a couple of white buttons vertically on his chest and each matching cufflink on both his cuffs, cowboy boots made from brown plastic with both each couple outlined cacti on both sides and a black handwriting reading "ANDY" on his right boot sole, spurs made from gold plastic on both sides of his boots, a holster made from brown plastic with a gold brooch with a red center on it, a white vest with black cow spots all over, a red bandanna, blue jeans, a belt made from brown plastic with a buckle that has a bull design on it made from gold plastic, a cowboy hat made from brown hand-stitched, polyvinyl plastic with a triangle-shaped brim, star-shaped badge made from gold plastic with small spheres on each tip and a word "SHERIFF" on the center, and a pull string on his back with a white hoop attached to it. Woody is 15.18 inches tall without his hat, and 15.93 inches tall with his hat on.
    In the first Toy Story, Woody is Andy's favorite toy and leader of Andy's toys. His best pal is Slinky Dog who he often played checkers with and he had a relationship with Bo Peep. Woody has been the favorite since Andy went to kindergarten and had the place of high honor on Andy's bed as well as his owner's name on his right boot.
    He holds a meeting informing them of an upcoming move to a new house that is next week and the fact that, due to the move, Andy's birthday party is being held that day. At the request of the other toys, Woody coordinates a reconnaissance mission to discover what Andy's new toys are, as everyone fears being replaced. At first, the gifts are mostly toys and games.
    However, to Woody's dismay, Andy receives Buzz Lightyear, a Space Ranger action figure complete with impressive electronic gadgets including high-pressure space wings, a laser, an electronic voice box, karate chop action, wrist-communicator, open-able space helmet, and can even glow in the dark. He is instantly extremely popular with the other toys, making Woody feel jealous. To make matters worse, Buzz is under the delusion that he is a real Space Ranger and needs to travel back to his own planet.
    As the days go by, Buzz seems to be getting most of the attention and Woody feels his world crumbling all around him especially when the posters on the walls, the pictures, and even the bedclothes with his theme all change to Buzz and he ends up in the toy box instead of on the bed. Buzz even gets his owner's name on the bottom of his right boot with permanent ink (just like Woody), which infuriates Woody even further.
    When Woody hears Andy is going to Pizza Planet for dinner and he has to bring only one toy, he fearfully knows that Andy will choose Buzz; confirmed when he shakes a Magic 8 Ball for answers. As a result, he sees an opportunity to get Buzz out of the way and keep Andy to himself. First, he hatches a plan to knock Buzz behind Andy's desk using RC Car, but it backfires and Buzz gets knocked out of the window instead. The other toys, especially Mr. Potato Head and Hamm (excluding Rex, Slinky, and Bo Peep), rebel against Woody, believing he attempted to kill Buzz out of jealousy. They immediately tackle him to exact revenge, but the struggle is cut short when Woody is taken by Andy to Pizza Planet. While Andy's mother refuels the car at a gas station, Woody ponders how he can return to Andy's room alone, knowing that without Buzz, the toys will tear him apart as they still don't believe him. Suddenly, he is confronted by Buzz, and the two end up fighting and accidentally land outside the car, which drives off and leaves the two stranded.
    A bitter argument between them ensues, ending with Woody, upset, frustrated, and furious, telling Buzz once and for all that he had turned Andy against him, and that he is a toy, not a real Space Ranger, so they go their separate ways. Suddenly, Woody spots a truck bound for Pizza Planet and plans to rendezvous with Andy there. Remembering he has to face the wrath of the other toys if he returns without Buzz, Woody convinces Buzz that the truck will take them to a spaceship. At Pizza Planet, Buzz stuffs himself into a rocket-shaped claw game machine, forcing Woody to clamber into the machine to try and rescue him. Woody and Buzz are then captured by Andy's next-door neighbor, the toy-destroying Sid Phillips. As Woody desperately attempts to escape from Sid's house before Andy's family's moving day, Buzz finally realizes (the hard way) that he is a toy and becomes a depressed burden to Woody. In the film's turning point, Woody admits that Buzz is a "cool toy" and despairs that he himself stands no chance of being Andy's favorite; so he was afraid to come back, afraid Andy and his toys wouldn't love him anymore.
    When Buzz is taken away by Sid to be destroyed with a firework rocket, Woody teams up with Sid's mutant toys and stages a rescue of Buzz, terrifying Sid into running away in fear of his own toys. Woody and Buzz climb into the moving van, attracting the attention of Sid's dog Scud. When Buzz sacrifices himself to save Woody by tackling the dog, Woody attempts to rescue Buzz with Andy's RC. However, he is then chucked out of the van by the other toys, who mistakenly believed that Woody is trying to get rid of RC like he did to Buzz. Woody hitches a ride on RC with Buzz, then the other toys witness this and realize they made a mistake, then they try to help him get back on the van. When RC's batteries run out, Woody realizes that he can ignite Buzz's rocket and manages to toss RC into the moving truck just as he and Buzz go soaring into the air. They glide in the air until they land safely inside Andy's car. At the end of the film, which takes place at Christmas, Woody and Buzz stage another reconnaissance mission to prepare for the new toy arrivals. As Woody wonders what gift may be worse than Buzz, Andy receives a puppy, to which Buzz and Woody share a worried smile.
    In Toy Story 2, about a year after the first film, Woody, ready for an annual trip with Andy to a place called Cowboy Camp, struggles to find his trademark cowboy hat. He sends everyone in search of it, and while everyone is searching, Bo Peep snags him with her cane (again). She encourages him that everything will be all right, nearly kissing him before being interrupted by Rex struggling with her sheep, and moments later Slinky finds the hat. After preparing for departure, Andy accidentally tears Woody's arm while playing with him and Buzz Lightyear before leaving for camp. To Woody's dismay, Andy leaves Woody on the shelf, despite Ms. Davis offering to fix him on the way. Woody, being unable to move his arm, begins to have a nightmare of what might happen when Andy returns from camp, with Andy saying that he does not want to play with anymore after he saw he still had that torn arm and drops him into the pile of cards left on the floor by Rex, Mr. Potato Head, and Rocky, which opens into a blue area of cards floating. He falls into a giant card which leads him into a trash can filled with severed hands, and they grab him by the neck as tried to climb out while he begs Andy not to do it, but he sadly says goodbye to Woody and closes the trash can lid, ignoring Woody's pleads. Woody wakes from his nightmare and finds Wheezy, a penguin toy whose squeaker is still broken. Woody then learns Ms. Davis is about to have a yard sale and warns the toys about it in time. However Wheezy get taken by Andy's mother to be sold at the yard sale. Woody rescues Wheezy with the help of Andy's dog Buster, but he is accidentally left behind at the yard sale and subsequently founded by a little girl who wanted her mom to buy him for her, but she refuses due to his torn arm and threw him on a table catching the attention of Al McWhiggin, the owner of the toy store, Al's Toy Barn. He tries to offer, bribe, and bargain with Ms. Davis, but she refuses to sell the sheriff and stores him in the cash box. Irritated at her noncompliance, Al resorts to thievery, stealing Woody by causing a distraction with a skateboard, so with Ms. Davis focused on the mess, Al is able to snatch Woody from right under her nose. He quickly hurries to his car, storing the bag holding Woody in the trunk, as Buzz tries to save his friend, but fails.
    AWD?!

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    9201?
    Originally, Harrison Ford was Spielberg's first choice to play Eddie Valiant.
    Bill Murray was also considered for the role of Eddie, but due to his method of receiving offers for roles, he missed out.
    Eddie Murphy turned down the role of Eddie, but later regretted it when the film became popular. Had he got the part, his portrayal of the character would fit well with the theme of racial and ethnic discrimination.
    Chevy Chase, Robert Redford, Jack Nicholson, Sylvester Stallone, Wallace Shawn, Ed Harris, Charles Grodin, and Don Lane were also considered for the role of Eddie.
    Originally, Tim Curry was considered for the role of Doom, but the writers were afraid that viewers would find him too terrifying. However, even with Lloyd being cast as Doom instead, viewers still find him very frightening, especially considering the fact that even if he was cast as a villain, most of Christopher Lloyd's roles were often comic relief, something Doom isn't.
    John Cleese was also interested for the role of Judge Doom.
    Christopher Lee turned down the role of Judge Doom.
    Roddy McDowall, Eddie Deezen (who would later go on to voice Mandark in Dexter's Laboratory), Sting, and Jon Pertwee were also considered for the role of Doom.
    The photograph that Eddie takes of Marvin Acme and Jessica playing "patty-cake" was created during pre-production, and features an earlier design of Jessica than the one that is used in the final character animation. The one shot that was re-done to incorporate the new Jessica design was the insert shot of the picture after it is first developed.
    At the time of its release, this was the most expensive film produced and had the longest on-screen credits for a film.
    When the toon train hits the Dip Machine, each window of the train shows a murder or death event taking place (if viewed frame-by-frame).
    The opening track on the Sting album "...Nothing Like the Sun", the song "The Lazarus Heart" was originally written as the movie's musical finale, at an early stage of the movie's production when the book's tragic ending, where Roger is killed in the crossfire during the final duel, was still in the script. When the studio ordered its default ending to be used at the film's end, in which Roger is alive at the end of the duel, however, the song was deleted from the script and ended up on Sting's album instead.
    The gag of Monte the Pelican falling off his bicycle came about by accident. Originally, the pelican would have ridden straight past the camera, but the effect technicians were unable to keep the bike upright. The filmmakers decided to let the bicycle fall and animate the pelican losing his balance.
    An exposure sheet (a chart for keeping track of the drawings to be shot for animation) can be seen in R.K. Maroon's desk. The exposure sheet can also be seen clinging to Eddie Valiant as Roger jumps up screaming after drinking scotch in Maroon's office.
    Animation director Richard Williams strove for three things while creating this film's animation: Warner Bros.' Looney Tunes-type characters; Disney-quality animation and Tex Avery-style humor..."but not so brutal." ( though would later be brutal in Animaniacs. )
    Roger Rabbit is described (design-wise) as having a "Warners face", a "Disney body", a "Tex Avery attitude", Goofy's overalls, Mickey Mouse's gloves and red pants, Bugs Bunny's rabbit form, Woody Woodpecker's hairstyle and Porky Pig's bowtie. Animation director Richard Williams says he based his Roger color model on the American flag (red overalls, white body, blue tie) so that "everyone would subliminally like it".
    To give Jessica's ample bosom an unusual bounce, her supervising animator Russell Hall reversed the natural up-down movements of her breasts as she walked: they bounce up when a real woman's breasts bounce down and vice versa.
    Animation producer Richard Williams fell in love with the character of ("adult") Baby Herman, and insisted on animating practically every frame of the character himself.
    The bottle of chili sauce falling in the opening cartoon had to be reanimated several times as British animators used the UK spelling "chilli".
    One of the photos in Roger's wallet is of him and Jessica dining at the Brown Derby. The caricatures on the walls are of some of the filmmakers, including Robert Zemeckis, Richard Williams, and Steven Spielberg, as well as one of Mickey Mouse.
    The crowd scenes at the beginning of the Toontown sequence consist mostly of animation from previous Disney films. (Reusing animation was a common practice for Disney up until the early 1990s.)
    When Eddie takes Roger into the back room at the bar where Dolores works to cut apart the hand-cuffs, the lamp from ceiling is bumped and swinging. Lots of extra work was needed to make the shadows match between the actual room shots and the animation for very little viewer benefit. Today, "Bump the Lamp" is a term used by many Disney employees to refer to going that extra mile on an effect just to make it a little more special even though most viewers (or guests, in the case of the parks and resorts) will never notice it.
    The Ink and Paint Club is the name of a show on Walt Disney's from back in the '50s.
    The password to get in to the Ink and Paint Club is "Walt Sent Me". This is likely a homage to the "The Golden Horseshoe Revue" episode of the Wonderful World of Disney, where Walt Disney (in an introduction to the episode) says that he has the viewer's table reserved, and to "Tell them Walt sent you!"
    The Judge Doom character was originally going to have an animated pet vulture that sat on his shoulder, but that idea was dropped in the interest of saving time. However, the vulture later resurfaced with Judge Doom when a bendable action figure was produced. It also appears during the final scene when the Toons are looking at the remains of Judge Doom.
    AWD?!

  • @mohamadfaiz6935
    @mohamadfaiz6935 Před rokem +1

    Metro E Line (Expo) a soon to be Santa Monica - East Los Angeles train via Regional Connector

  • @sisigpapi
    @sisigpapi Před rokem

    In college this was one of the trains I'd take home at night in when my bus lines weren't running

  • @rolandocontreras7373
    @rolandocontreras7373 Před 3 lety +2

    Good morning @LARailProductions, can you do for LA Metro D (Purple) Line from Wilshire & Western to Union Station, then can you do for LA Metro B (Red) Line from North Hollywood to Union Station please???

  • @bengalibruin
    @bengalibruin Před 2 lety +1

    That moment at 16:00 when you can see the standstill on the eastbound 10 to the left.

  • @flattrain5834
    @flattrain5834 Před 3 lety +2

    Nice! Took you a while lol.

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    9204?
    Stupid Weasel, the one in the striped shirt and the beanie hat with propellers, is the only weasel with a bellybutton.
    Disney's Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, Sleeping Beauty, The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad and Mary Poppins' characters didn't exist yet back in 1947, the year the movie was set in and yet some of those characters were visible in the 1988 movie. However, said movies were in production in the 1940s, which is possibly the reason for their inclusion.
    Also, Looney Tunes character Marvin the Martian made a cameo in the final scene, but he didn't debut until 1948; a year after this movie takes place.
    Other characters such as Tom & Jerry, Popeye, Little Lulu, Mighty Mouse and other deleted characters were originally intended to appear in the deleted "Acme's Funeral" scene.
    Also, Looney Tunes characters Pepé Le Pew and Tasmanian Devil (Taz) were planned to appear as cameos in the film, but they were dropped for reasons yet unknown.
    Some of the directors/producers were thinking about making a sequel or prequel to the film called Who Discovered Roger Rabbit or Roger Rabbit: World Road Trip.
    This film is often said to be the inspiration for the 2012 movie Wreck-It Ralph due to both featuring cameos of many famous characters, though Wreck-It Ralph has cameos by video game characters. The Muppet Movie features a similar crossover of characters during its "Rainbow Connection" finale, among which range from the characters of Sesame Street and The Muppet Show, Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas, and The Land of Gorch.
    When you see Eddie walking into the bar for the first time that's near his office, look at the American Flag behind the bar. It has 50 stars. The movie is based in 1947, but the last two of the 50 states, Alaska and Hawaii, didn't become states until 1959 (12 years later).
    Wheezy, the Toon Patrol weasel who smokes, is voiced by June Foray, who also voiced some female Looney Tunes characters.
    This makes Wheezy the only weasel to be voiced by a woman.
    "2011 Disneyana Fan Club Convention Highlight: Voice Panel" (Video). CZcams. Retrieved on April 16, 2013.
    uproxx.com/movies/harrison-ford-lost-roles/4/
    www.huffingtonpost.com/john-farr/bill-murray-and-the-roles_b_5850434.html
    Evans, Bradford (7 April 2011). "The Lost Roles of Eddie Murphy". Splitsider. Retrieved on 18 July 2015.
    mentalfloss.com/article/62910/15-things-you-might-not-know-about-who-framed-roger-rabbit
    www.buzzfeed.com/briangalindo/20-things-you-didnt-know-about-who-framed-roger-rabbit?.jlW64JPbRV#.yoYxe2OLKV
    mentalfloss.com/article/62910/15-things-you-might-not-know-about-who-framed-roger-rabbit
    mentalfloss.com/article/62910/15-things-you-might-not-know-about-who-framed-roger-rabbit
    www.itv.com/news/update/2012-08-08/bob-hoskins-retires-from-acting/
    www.dvdizzy.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=30567
    [1]
    WikipediaListLink Who Framed Roger Rabbit on Wikipedia
    Who Framed Roger Rabbit on Transcripts Wiki
    AWD?!

  • @sharonhazan3658
    @sharonhazan3658 Před rokem +1

    Can you please make the usc village and the silver line anouncements

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    6904?
    Overnight, Woody tries to get Buzz to help him escape. Still depressed, Buzz pessimistically confesses that he is only a "stupid, little, insignificant" toy. Woody tries to convince him that being a toy is much better than being a Space Ranger, and Andy still thinks he's the best thing in the world. Buzz doesn't know why Andy would want him, and Woody explains while coming to terms with his own feelings of resentment:
    "Why would Andy want you? Look at you! You're a Buzz Lightyear. Any other toy would give up his moving parts just to be you. You've got wings, you glow in the dark, you talk, your helmet does that... that whoosh thing. You are a cool toy... as a matter of fact, you're too cool. I mean--I mean what chance does a toy like me have against a Buzz Lightyear action figure? [...] Why would Andy ever wanna play with me, when he's got you? I'm the one that should be strapped to that rocket..."
    As this happens, Buzz looks at his boot where Andy has signed his name, helping him realize how much Andy loves him and how being a toy isn't too bad. So even as a hopeless Woody tells Buzz to go on without him, save himself and get back to Andy, a reinvigorated Buzz helps Woody out of the crate. The two try to escape (although Buzz accidentally knocks the toolbox on Woody when trying to get the milk crate off of him). Unfortunately, Sid wakes up and takes Buzz out to blow him up, leaving Woody alone in the room. Even worse, Andy and his family are getting ready to move, with Andy depressed over having to have seemingly lost Woody and Buzz having only been able to find Buzz's cardboard spaceship and his cowboy hat. Desperate, Woody calls out to the Mutant Toys to help him, although it seemed they weren't willing to help him after Woody attacked them. Just when Woody was about to lose hope, Babyface convinces the Mutant Toys to help Woody as he tells him his plan, thanking them in the process.
    After a daring escape through the house and past Scud, Woody and the mutants end up in the yard with Sid. After getting into positions, Woody starts of the plan by speaking to him through his voice box just before Sid comes close to lighting the rocket, proceeding to tell him that his toys are sick of being tortured, breaking the rules as they allow Sid to see that they can move on their own, then with his own voice, Woody tells him (in a Kevin Conroy Batman-esque way) to play nice. This freaks Sid out and he runs into the house screaming, where his sister frightens him with her new doll Sally, a possible replacement for her original doll Janie, which was destroyed by Sid.
    Now freed from Sid, Woody and Buzz try to catch Andy's moving van just as it is pulling away from the house. After saying farewell to the Mutant Toys, a harrowing chase follows, with Scud chasing them and Andy's toys not helping, since they still think that Woody intentionally killed both Buzz and RC. Luckily, Woody and Buzz trap Scud and the other toys finally see that Woody was telling the truth and realized their mistake. Unfortunately, RC's batteries give out, so Woody lights the rocket strapped to Buzz by using Buzz's helmet to magnify the heat of the sun. They shoot into the air Woody drops RC into the van as they fly over, but not before hitting Mr. Potato Head. Just when it seems they would be destroyed by the rocket, Buzz activates his wings to sever the tape just before the rocket explodes. Buzz and Woody glide over the van and drop into Andy's car through the skylight. Woody and Buzz return to Andy, whose mom assumes they were in the car all along.
    A few months later, at Christmas in Andy's new house, Sarge and the soldiers are reporting the new presents received, similar to the birthday party, with the toys less worried about the new ones from now on. Mr. Potato Head is pleased to find out that Molly has been given a Mrs. Potato Head. The film ends with Woody and Buzz discussing being replaced by a new toy like Woody was almost replaced by Buzz, Woody poses the question to Buzz, "What could Andy possibly get that is worse than you?", and with the answer coming in the form of Andy's first present, a puppy which makes Woody and Buzz feel quite uneasy.
    AWD?!

  • @metrorailinlosangelesprodu4407

    Good Video . Your phone has good audio .

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    6905?
    Coolio as Wax Coolio
    Larry King as Wax Larry King
    April Winchell as Ma
    John Oliver as Wax Sherlock Holmes
    Ken Jenkins as Pa
    Jessica DiCicco as Tambry
    Fred Tatasciore as Pituitaur
    Michael Rianda as Lee, Thompson, and Mr. Poolcheck
    Alfred Molina as Multi-Bear
    Grey DeLisle as Woman
    Carl Faruolo as Grenda
    Niki Yang as Candy Chiu
    Greg Ellis as William Shakespeare
    Stephen Root as Bud Gleeful
    Scott Menville as Nate
    Justin Roiland as Blendin Blandin and Bobbi Renzobbi
    Brian Bloom as Rumble McSkirmish
    Jeff Bennett as the Summerween Trickster
    Will Friedle as Reginald (in "The Legend of the Gobblewonker")
    Horatio Sanz as Blond mustached man (in "The Legend of the Gobblewonker")
    Conrad Vernon as Tate McGucket
    Chris Parnell as
    Roger L. Jackson as
    Eric Bauza as Reginald (in "The Hand That Rocks the Mabel"), Jean-Luc
    Kari Wahlgren as Shandra Jimenez
    Mikey Kelley as Dancy Pants Revolution Announcer
    Tara Strong as Sue
    Andrew Pifko as
    Diedrich Bader as Dundgren
    Dave Wittenberg as Lolph
    Matt Chapman as Mermando
    Corey Burton as the lawyer
    "Weird Al" Yankovic as Probabilitor the Annoying
    Unnamed old woman in pink
    Unnamed old woman in purple
    Within the end credits of each episode is a cryptogram that can be solved based on a hint given at the end of the show's opening theme. During the last few seconds, a whisper can be heard that, when reversed, says "Three Letters Back". This is a Caesar cipher, which, in this case, uses a letter three places back from the letter it represents (e.g., A=X, Z=W, etc.) and is used from episode 101 ("Tourist Trapped") to episode 106 ("Dipper vs. Manliness").
    Starting with episode 107 ("Double Dipper"), the cryptogram must be solved using the Atbash substitution cypher, which reverses the alphabet (meaning that A=Z, B=Y, and so on). This is signaled by the message at the end of Dipper vs. Manliness, which states "MR. CAESARIAN WILL BE OUT NEXT WEEK. MR. ATBASH WILL SUBSTITUTE", and the whisper was changed accordingly. After the song ends, a creature similar to the Eye of Providence is flashed. In some episodes, it is surrounded by symbols that appear in the show and various messages, including a matrix, the Konami Code, an the encoded words "Stan is not what he seems". Earlier in the opening, Bigfoot passes the camera, and performs the pose made famous by the Patterson film. A mysterious man that showed up in the background was shown to be a time traveler in the episode "The Time Traveler's Pig".
    Every episode has a unique, non-repeating "secret message" at the end of its credit scene. The key for decoding the secret message is always incorporated in the opening theme-song scene. In order to deduce the decoder, one must first listen to the theme song backwards. Consequently, the theme song changes across some episodes. The latest decoder, for example, for episode 14 says "26 letters", and the code in the credits are a series of numbers (which, in this case, corresponds to the letter in that position in the alphabet (hence the "26 letters" in the opening theme), and at the end of the theme song, the whispering sounds at the end are played backwards in three letters. If you forward the whispering it sounds like "I'm still here". Bill Cipher is also seen on many things in Gravity Falls.
    Gravity Falls is the second Disney show with an LGBT lead character (Wendy), the first being The Owl House (Amity Blight and Luz Noceda). Even though Gravity Falls predates The Owl House, Amity and Luz were confirmed to be LGBT before Wendy.
    Unlike recent Disney Channel/Disney XD cartoons, such as Phineas and Ferb, Wander Over Yonder, and Fish Hooks, Gravity Falls does not have two episodes in one 30-minute time slot, instead using the entire 30 minute time slot for one episode, like the live-action shows.
    Additionally, rather than starting with an opening theme, Gravity Falls starts with a cold open and then has the opening theme song, similar to other Disney Channel live-action TV shows and older Disney Channel cartoons.
    Dipper and Mabel are based on the show's creator, Alex Hirsch, and his twin sister, Ariel Hirsch.
    Gravity Falls is animated in Korea by Digital eMation, Inc. and Rough Draft Studios Korea Co., Ltd.
    The first episode, "Tourist Trapped", was available as a free HD/SD download off the US iTunes Store, for a limited time.
    Gravity Falls was mentioned on the Cartoon Network series MAD.
    In the opening theme when it shows the trees, if you look closely, you can see a quick glimpse of Bigfoot.
    The reason why some characters have four fingers and others have five was an aesthetic choice. In the character designing phase, it was decided some characters simply looked better with five fingers over four. Michael Rianda has stated that for various reasons they should have kept it consistent, so the audience should just pretend everyone has five fingers. Most adult characters have five fingers, while all children characters have four (except for Li'l Gideon so far.)
    In the early promotional material of Dipper's postcard home has a few strands of Joe Pitt's real hair.
    Disney had originally planned for an 8-month long hiatus in between "Summerween" and "Boss Mabel" instead of the four-month long one that it had.
    Gravity Falls is loosely based off a small Oregon town, Boring, OR, that Alex Hirsch had never visited but actually passed by.
    'The Mystery Shack' does exist, but is known as the 'Mystery Spot', and is located in Santa Cruz, California.
    The town was also made from a mish-mash of national parks from the area, including a paranormal area known as 'the Oregon Vortex'.
    J.K. Simmons and Alfred Molina previously starred together in Spider-Man 2.
    Although Gargoyles was the first DTVA show to be serialized/story-driven, Gravity Falls’ success on the Disney Channel and Disney XD started a trend of serialized/story-driven shows that would run from the 2010s through 2023, with DTVA's next story-driven show being Star vs. the Forces of Evil in 2015. This trend will continue on Disney+ after Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur and Hailey’s On It! either finish their run on the Disney Channel, or move to and become Disney+ Originals.
    AWD?!

  • @LestrainsdAlex
    @LestrainsdAlex Před 3 lety +2

    Nice vidéo 👍 👍 + 1 subscribers

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    165062?
    Ray follows her and tries to console her, but Tiana angrily snaps and hurts Ray by calling Evangeline nothing more than a star that is millions of miles away from him, and that he needs to open his eyes to the truth before he gets hurt as she did. Still not convinced, Ray rushes back to the Mardi Gras parade and frees frog-Naveen, who stops the wedding by jumping onto the impostor and knocking him off the float. Lawrence loses the talisman and is returned to his true form. Realizing its significance, Ray steals the voodoo talisman and flies away with it. Furious, the Shadow Man chases Ray all the way to the cemetery to retrieve the talisman with Lawrence staying out of sight under his order while holding Naveen captive.
    Ray finally meets up with Tiana and gives her the talisman, telling her the Naveen they saw with Charlotte is not really him and making her promise to keep it out of the Shadow Man's possession when they saw the shadows coming for the talisman. She hops away with it, while Ray stays behind to destroy as many shadows as possible. With his light, he kills a few of them. The Shadow Man knocks Ray to the ground and coldly steps on him without a second thought before wearing a disgusted expression and casually walks off. A few seconds later, Louis comes running, calling for Ray, but finds the firefly lying on the ground mortally wounded.
    The shadows and the Shadow Man continue chasing Tiana before finally cornering her, but when she threatens to break the talisman into a million pieces, the Shadow Man casts an enchantment on her, causing her to look human again, and changes the setting to her dream restaurant with the Shadow Man offering to make her a deal. She thinks she sees Naveen playing the ukulele in the corner of the room, but when the man turns around, she sees it isn't and is disappointed. The Shadow Man, meanwhile, tries to convince Tiana to hand over the talisman, promising the restaurant and becoming a human again. When she refuses to, he brings up memories of her sacrifices and people doubting her abilities. Finally, he shows her the memory of how her father works hard but fails to get enough money for a restaurant. He tells her that if she gives him the talisman, he'll turn her back into a human and give her everything she's ever dreamed of - everything she and her father always wanted. Tiana hesitates for a moment, but her eyes light up in realization, and she explains that while it's true her father never got what he wanted, he had what he needed; he had love, and he never lost sight of what was really important, and she'll never do the same too. Tiana throws the talisman to the ground, but it's snatched up by the Shadow Man's own shadow, and the illusion immediately disappears.
    The Shadow Man cackles, transforms Tiana back into a frog, and tells her that she should have taken his deal, but Tiana takes the talisman back using her tongue and shatters it into pieces. He is horrified and frets how he won't be able to pay back his debt. The talisman's broken state greatly angers the voodoo spirits, who come out to give the Shadow Man his punishment. Totem heads come out of the stone heads, asking if he's ready, which he replies that he isn't. Voodoo dolls climb out of the ground, and in terror, he says that he has lots more plans, revealing that he has the prince locked away, making Tiana realize that Ray was telling the truth about the Naveen they saw with Charlotte. A shadow demon that came from an enormous totem head drags in the Shadow Man's shadow, which in turn brings along the hysterical witch doctor himself into the voodoo world to sacrifice his soul as punishment for his unpaid debt, much to Tiana's horror.
    After the Shadow Man's fate is sealed Tiana heads back to the parade, where she sees Naveen talking to Charlotte while the bumbling Lawrence was arrested and sent to the Parish Prison after he's been revealed to be a fraud. Naveen explains to Charlotte what happened to him and that if she kisses him by midnight (which is mere minutes away), he will become human again, and he will marry her. His only condition is that Charlotte has to give Tiana the money she needs for her restaurant and in the process, he calls her his "Evangeline". Deeply touched, Tiana hops out of the shadows and confesses her love for Naveen, telling him that she'd rather be not have her restaurant without him. Naveen reciprocates her love in return, and the two share a romantic moment of their proclaimed love. Charlotte is moved to tears that her friend is finally living out the fairy tale she has always dreamed of, and agrees to kiss Naveen for Tiana, so they can both be human again and marry each other.
    She holds Naveen in her hand and leans in for the kiss - but it's too late. Midnight has come and, though she kisses him again and again, nothing happens as Charlotte is no longer a princess. Before anything else can be said between the now-content Tiana and Naveen, Louis rushes to them, holding a dying Ray in his hands. He lays Ray on the ground, and he turns to Tiana and Naveen, asking them why they're still frogs, and they softly reply to him that the two of them are staying that way and together - thanks, in part, to him. Ray gives a weak smile, saying that he likes it, and Evangeline does too. His eyes slowly close, and his light slowly flickers out as he peacefully passes away.
    His three sad friends bring him back to the bayou for a funeral with his family. As they place his tiny body in a leaf with two flowers and push it out across the water, everyone starts to gasp and look up at the sky as a bright, white light shines down from above. Another star has appeared beside Evangeline, shining just as brightly. Everyone starts to cheer because they can see that Ray finally got his wish to be with Evangeline at last.
    The funeral then fades away to a celebration as animals from the entire bayou gather together to see Mama Odie perform Naveen and Tiana's wedding ceremony. After she pronounces them "frog and wife", they share a kiss and turn back into humans. Mama Odie laughs as the two figure out that by becoming Naveen's wife, Tiana became a princess and thus, kissing each other broke the spell.
    The two return to New Orleans where they have a second wedding ceremony, then buy the old sugar mill from the Real Estate agents with some help from Louis and work together, fixing it up and eventually turning it into "Tiana's Palace", a very successful, upscale restaurant. We see Tiana and Naveen happily serving tables as Louis the gator entertains the guests onstage with his trumpet and a band he performed with at the Mardi Gras parade, finally living his own dream. Tiana and Naveen go up to the roof, where they dance together and share a kiss beneath the stars. Tiana sings, "Dreams do come true in New Orleans!", while Ray and Evangeline continue to shine brightly together in the night sky above as the movie closes.
    AWD?!

  • @MetroSheepProductionsMSP
    @MetroSheepProductionsMSP Před 3 lety +4

    It took you 3 years to upload this video! 🤣

    • @LARailProductions
      @LARailProductions  Před 3 lety +3

      I just never found the time until now lol

    • @rolandocontreras7373
      @rolandocontreras7373 Před 3 lety +1

      @@LARailProductions you made it.

    • @matthews3432
      @matthews3432 Před 2 lety +1

      Same I noticed it was a bit older the train crossing light is now white not yellow anymore

  • @user-ye3ch3cc5m
    @user-ye3ch3cc5m Před rokem

    ...городской трамвай...

  • @javierbarrucz7755
    @javierbarrucz7755 Před 10 měsíci

    ✅✅✅🚊🚊🚊🚊 45:46

  • @davidguopasadenacitycolleg3035

    9196?
    Main article: List of cameos in Who Framed Roger Rabbit
    Bob Hoskins as Eddie Valiant: An alcoholic private investigator who strongly dislikes Toons. Years ago, Valiant's brother was killed by a Toon after a piano was dropped on his head. Producer Steven Spielberg's first choice for Eddie Valiant was Harrison Ford, but he asked for too much money.
    Christopher Lloyd as Judge Doom: The evil, sadistic judge of Toontown District Superior Court and also the evil CEO of Cloverleaf Industries before his death. It is eventually revealed that Doom is indeed a Toon, and responsible for the death of Valiant's brother. Lloyd was cast because he previously worked with director Robert Zemeckis and Amblin Entertainment in Back to the Future. Lloyd decided it was best not to blink his eyes to perfectly portray the character.
    Richard LeParmentier as Lt. Santino: LAPD Police Lieutenant and friend to Eddie Valiant.
    Joanna Cassidy as Dolores: Valiant's on-off girlfriend who helps him and Roger solve the case against Judge Doom. Dolores is also a waitress.
    Alan Tilvern as R.K. Maroon: Grumpy owner of "Maroon Cartoon" studios. Maroon hires Valiant to find out what is bothering Roger in his poor acting performances. He is eventually murdered by Judge Doom.
    Stubby Kaye as Marvin Acme: Prankster-like owner of the Acme Corporation. The scandal of Acme playing pattycake with Jessica leads to his own death.
    Richard Ridings as Angelo: A man who acts like a greedy, wise-cracking jerk who makes fun of Eddie Valiant and his detective work.
    Film producer Joel Silver as Raoul J. Raoul: the frustrated director at the beginning of the film.
    Charles Fleischer as Roger Rabbit: An A-list Toon working for "Maroon Cartoons" who is eventually framed for the murder of Marvin Acme. To facilitate Hoskins' performance, Fleischer dressed in a bunny suit and "stood in" behind camera for most scenes. Fleischer also provides the voices of Benny the Cab and Greasy and Psycho from the Toon Patrol.
    Wayne Allwine as Mickey Mouse: Mickey appears during the scene with Bugs Bunny when Eddie Valiant was falling from the apartment. The two agreed to be in the movie with their friends and loved ones on one condition: they each have the same amount of screentime and dialogue.
    Tony Anselmo as Donald Duck: Donald appears during a piano scene with Daffy Duck. He becomes angry after a few times and hides himself inside the piano and takes a cannon to shoot on Daffy Duck.
    Russi Taylor as Minnie Mouse and Toon Birds
    Tony Pope as Goofy and Big Bad Wolf
    Bill Farmer provided additional dialogue as Goofy[1] and also voiced Koko the Clown
    Mel Blanc as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Tweety Bird, Porky Pig, and Sylvester
    Lou Hirsch as Baby Herman: Roger's frequent co-star in Maroon Cartoons. Williams said Baby Herman was a mixture of "Elmer Fudd and Tweety crashed together." Hirsch was the original choice for Benny the Cab.
    April Winchell provides the voice of Mrs. Herman and Baby Herman's baby voice at the beginning of the film.
    Les Perkins as J. Thaddeus Toad
    Cherry Davis as Woody Woodpecker
    Richard Williams as Droopy
    Joe Alaskey as Yosemite Sam
    David Lander as Smarty: The relatively intelligent, wise-cracking leader of the Toon Patrol.
    June Foray as Lena Hyena and Wheezy
    Fred Newman as Stupid
    Peter Westy as Pinocchio
    Mae Questel as Betty Boop
    Mary T. Radford as Hyacinth Hippo
    Jim Cummings, Pat Buttram, and Jim Gallant as Valiant's Bullets
    Morgan Deare as Bongo the Gorilla
    Jack Angel as the Toon Shoes
    Nancy Cartwright as the Dipped Toon Shoe
    Dave Spafford as Daffy Duck (woo-hoo sound)
    Kathleen Turner provides the voice of Jessica Rabbit: Roger Rabbit's astoundingly attractive wife. Amy Irving supplied the singing voice, while Betsy Brantley served as the model for animators to base their picture on. Jessica was also based on actress Veronica Lake.
    Frank Welker as Dumbo (uncredited)
    Archive sound of Frank Sinatra from the song "Witchcraft" was used for the Singing Sword.
    Walt Disney Pictures purchased the film rights to Gary Wolf's novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit? shortly after its publication in 1981. Ron W. Miller, then president of The Walt Disney Company, saw it as a perfect opportunity to produce a blockbuster. Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman were hired to write the script, penning two drafts. Robert Zemeckis offered his services as director in 1982, but Disney acknowledged that his previous films (I Wanna Hold Your Hand and Used Cars) were box office bombs, and thus let him go. Between 1981 to 1983 Disney developed test footage with Darrell Van Citters as animation director, Paul Reubens voicing Roger Rabbit, Peter Renaday as Eddie Valiant, and Russi Taylor as Jessica Rabbit. When Michael Eisner became the new Disney president, he revamped the project in 1985. Amblin Entertainment, which consisted of Steven Spielberg, Frank Marshall, and Kathleen Kennedy, were approached to produce Who Framed Roger Rabbit alongside Disney. The original budget was projected at $50 million, which Disney felt was too expensive.
    Roger Rabbit was finally green-lighted when the budget went down to $29.9 million, which at the time, still made it the most expensive animated film ever green lighted. Disney executive Jeffrey Katzenberg argued that the hybrid of live action and animation would "save" Disney's animation department. Spielberg's contract included an extensive amount of creative control and a large percentage of the box office profits. Disney kept all merchandising rights. Spielberg convinced Warner Bros., Paramount Pictures, and Universal Pictures and many other companies to "lend" their characters to appear in the film. Terry Gilliam was offered the chance to direct, but he found the project too technically challenging. "Pure laziness on my part," Gilliam said he "completely regret[s] that decision". Robert Zemeckis was hired to direct in 1985, based on the success of Romancing the Stone and Back to the Future. Richard Williams was hired to direct the animation sequences.
    AWD?!