Pim Wright (partially found French-Korean animated TV series; 1997-2003): Difference between revisions
(Added another category and changed some text about parties involved in the animation production.) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{InfoboxLost|title=<center>Pim Wright</center>|image=PIM.jpg|imagecaption=Promotional poster of the show|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Found'''</span>}} | {{InfoboxLost|title=<center>Pim Wright</center>|image=PIM.jpg|imagecaption=Promotional poster of the show|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Found'''</span>}} | ||
'''Pim Wright''' (''commonly known as Pim'') was an animation cartoon series produced by PMMP<ref>PMMP (Philippe Mounier Marketing Production), http://pmmp.fr</ref> and TF1, with Hahn Shin Corporation, RG Prince and Pipangai<ref name=":0">Cœurs-de-Requins, http://coeursderequins.free.fr/Pim/</ref><ref>Planète Jeunesse, http://www.planete-jeunesse.com/fiche-1572-pim.html</ref> working on the animation, which aired on TF1, TF! Youth and IDF1, while in South Korea, it aired on KBS in 1999<ref>kbrkjs on NAVER, https://blog.naver.com/kbrkjs/50116030910</ref><ref>미만부, http://sulfur.pe.kr/tech/board.php?board=lyric&command=body&no=824</ref><ref>KBATV.ORG, http://kbatv.org/dept/dept_prof.asp?dcode=109</ref>. The show originally ran in France between 1997-2003, and had a total of 104 episodes<ref>Episodes (English) - Cœurs-de-Requins, http://coeursderequins.free.fr/Pim/Langue/anglais.html</ref>, featuring titular characters like Pim, Tomi and Newton, designed after vegetables and fruits in a village. The show also broadcasted in several other countries via their own dubs, such as in English, Spanish, German, and Arabic. | '''Pim Wright''' (''commonly known as Pim'') was an animation cartoon series produced by PMMP<ref>PMMP (Philippe Mounier Marketing Production), http://pmmp.fr</ref> and TF1, with Hahn Shin Corporation, RG Prince and Pipangai<ref name=":0">Cœurs-de-Requins, http://coeursderequins.free.fr/Pim/</ref><ref>Planète Jeunesse, http://www.planete-jeunesse.com/fiche-1572-pim.html</ref> working on the animation, which aired on TF1, TF! Youth and IDF1, while in South Korea, it aired on KBS in 1999<ref>kbrkjs on NAVER, https://blog.naver.com/kbrkjs/50116030910</ref><ref>미만부, http://sulfur.pe.kr/tech/board.php?board=lyric&command=body&no=824</ref><ref>KBATV.ORG, http://kbatv.org/dept/dept_prof.asp?dcode=109</ref>. The show originally ran in France between 1997-2003, and had a total of 104 episodes<ref>Episodes (English) - Cœurs-de-Requins, http://coeursderequins.free.fr/Pim/Langue/anglais.html</ref>, featuring titular characters like Pim, Tomi and Newton, designed after vegetables and fruits in a village. The show also broadcasted in several other countries via their own dubs, such as in English, Spanish, German, and Arabic. | ||
Line 11: | Line 10: | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
[[Category:Lost media]] | [[Category:Lost media]] | ||
[[Category:Lost animation]] | [[Category:Lost animation]] | ||
[[Category:Partially found media]] | [[Category:Partially found media]] | ||
<references /> |
Revision as of 04:38, 25 March 2022
Pim Wright (commonly known as Pim) was an animation cartoon series produced by PMMP[1] and TF1, with Hahn Shin Corporation, RG Prince and Pipangai[2][3] working on the animation, which aired on TF1, TF! Youth and IDF1, while in South Korea, it aired on KBS in 1999[4][5][6]. The show originally ran in France between 1997-2003, and had a total of 104 episodes[7], featuring titular characters like Pim, Tomi and Newton, designed after vegetables and fruits in a village. The show also broadcasted in several other countries via their own dubs, such as in English, Spanish, German, and Arabic.
While some information about the show were documented on Cœurs-de-Requins, clips/episodes of the show can be hard to find in either English dub or its original contemporary of the French broadcast (some examples were embedded on Cœurs-de-Requins's website[8], but have since long gone). That being said, some clips of the Arabic dub, called "Pepper" [Arabic: فليفلة, Ful-ay-fil-a], can be easy to find on YouTube. (Said dub was broadcasted on channels like ART Teenz[9] and Dubai 33)
Danny Chang, composer of the show's music intro theme, did provide an extended and somewhat different cover on their website[10], compared to the one seen in the Arabic and Korean[11] intros.
Media
References
- ↑ PMMP (Philippe Mounier Marketing Production), http://pmmp.fr
- ↑ Cœurs-de-Requins, http://coeursderequins.free.fr/Pim/
- ↑ Planète Jeunesse, http://www.planete-jeunesse.com/fiche-1572-pim.html
- ↑ kbrkjs on NAVER, https://blog.naver.com/kbrkjs/50116030910
- ↑ 미만부, http://sulfur.pe.kr/tech/board.php?board=lyric&command=body&no=824
- ↑ KBATV.ORG, http://kbatv.org/dept/dept_prof.asp?dcode=109
- ↑ Episodes (English) - Cœurs-de-Requins, http://coeursderequins.free.fr/Pim/Langue/anglais.html
- ↑ Credits and Clips - Cœurs-de-Requins, http://coeursderequins.free.fr/Pim/Generiquevideos/index.html
- ↑ Arabic Dub Intro on ART Teenz, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGo3_Ik7WA0
- ↑ Pim Wright - Developing Creative Music (Danny Chang), https://www.developingcreativemusic.com/?ms_song=pim-wright
- ↑ Alledged audio of the Korean Intro on KBS, http://www.pandora.tv/view/ikim4258/51142062