Rabu, 19 Juni 2013

Angry Bird 2.0.1 44 Mb


angry+birds%281%29.png
 Download game Angry Bird < Burung Marah > yang sedang sangat populer .

ScreenShoot


angrybirds2.PNG
angrybirds1.PNG
Angry+Birds+2.1.0+Screen+Shoot.jpg

ada yang mau ?? silahkan didownload disini  :
 DOWNLOAD

Password Mediafire : aspirasisoft.us

Minimum System Requirements
  • OS: Windows XP SP2
  • RAM 512 MB
  • Graphic OpenGL 1.3 compatible
Instalasi :
  1. Install program
  2. Play game 
  3. Enter serial number: ISAL-GAME-FREE-FULL

VIEW NEXT ANGRY BIRD'S



More Sofware : @elmazz.blogspot.com

To download file, please wait about 5s then click "SKIP AD" button at top right as image bellow. Sorry for the inconvenience, Thank you!
adfly_skip_ads-en.png

HARAP BACA !
 Untuk Browser HP Operamini Agar "SKIP AD" di adf.ly Muncul caranya ketikkan di url =javascript:alert(showskipad)

lakukan maksimal 2 kali sampai muncul SKIP AD kemudian Klik.

Untuk mempermudah bagi pengguna Operamini lebih baik dibuat Speed Dial dengan alamat tadi = javascript:alert(showskipad)

GTA

 Setelah lama mencari cari game GTA untuk dimainkan di PC akhirnya nemu juga nih,
Ukurannya kecil jadi tidak merpotkan buat download karena memang game ini telah sukses di R.I.P, namun game ini tetap bagus kualitasnya..
yang mau silahkan lihat dulu screenshotnya :

game+gta+3+eLmazZ.jpg

GTA+3+PC+Game-01+eLmaaZ.jpg

Features

- Third installment in the series
- First game in the series to be in full 3D
- Awesome visuals and intense action
- Live out your wildest crime syndicate fantasies

Minimum System Requirements

    System: PIII 450 or equivalent
    RAM:96 MB RAM
    CD-ROM: 4X CD-ROM
    Video Memory: 32 MB VRAM
    Hard Drive Space: 700 MB
    Mouse: Yes
    Sound Board: Yes
    DirectX: DirectX v8.1

Recommended System Requirements

    System: PIII 700 or equivalent
    RAM: 128 MB RAM
    CD-ROM: 8X CD-ROM
    Video Memory: 32 MB VRAM
    Hard Drive Space: 700 MB

Free Download Game Pc Terbaru Grand Theft Auto GTA 3 Rip 2012


Senin, 17 Juni 2013

ben ten mobi.com in title

Talking Ben the Dog Free 1.2.3
Meet Talking Tom39;s best quot;friendquot; Ben  Ben is a retired chemistry p...
License: Freeware Size: 9.4M Updated: 11/14/12
Category: Entertainment Last Week Download: 74
Talking Tom & Ben News Free 1.0.2
Talking Tom Ben have become famous TV news personalities Talk to them ...
License: Freeware Size: 56.0MB Updated: 03/27/13
Category: Entertainment Last Week Download: 46
Mobi Twitter 0.34.13
A sample applications that shows how you can integrate with web services.
License: Freeware Size: 323KB Updated: 08/18/10
Category: Social Networking Last Week Download: 39
Ben 10 Ultimate Alien AA 2.0.0
The official Ben 10 Ultimate Alien isometric action game. Play as Cannonbol...
License: Freeware Size: 2.5M Updated: 11/14/12
Category: Action Last Week Download: 8
Ben 10 Theme 1.0
Ben 10 Theme
License: Freeware Size: 840KB Updated: 09/06/11
Category: Utilities Last Week Download: 7
Ben 10 Xenodrome 1.0.7
lt;lt; BEN 10 Ultimate Alien: Xenodrome gt;gt; Transform, battle and level ...
License: Freeware Size: 46M Updated: 11/14/12
Category: Action Last Week Download: 6

Minggu, 16 Juni 2013

Mammy Two Shoes

Mammy Two Shoes.
Mammy Two Shoes is a heavy-set middle-aged black woman who often has to deal with the mayhem generated by the lead characters. She is often seen as the owner of Tom. Her face was never shown (except very briefly in Saturday Evening Puss). Mammy's appearances have often been edited out, dubbed, or re-animated as a slim white woman in later television showings, since her character is a mammy archetype now often regarded asracist.

Tom and Jerry speaking


Jerry Mouse.

Tom and Jerry speaking

The Missing Mouse.) Co-director William Hanna provided most of the squeaks, gasps, and other vocal effects for the pair, including the most famous sound effects from the series, Tom's leather-lunged scream (created by recording Hanna's scream and eliminating the beginning and ending of the recording, leaving only the strongest part of the scream on the soundtrack) and Jerry's nervous gulp. The only other reasonably common vocalization is made by Tom when some external reference claims a certain scenario or eventuality to be impossible, which inevitably, ironically happens to thwart Tom's plans – at which point, a bedraggled and battered Tom appears and says in a haunting, echoing voice "Don't you believe it!", a reference to some famous World War IIpropaganda shorts of the 1940s[citation needed]. In the 1946 short Trap Happy, Tom hires a mouse exterminator who, after several failed attempts to dispatch Jerry, changes profession to Catexterminator by crossing out the "Mouse" on his title and writing "Cat", resulting in Tom spelling out the word out loud before reluctantly pointing at himself. One short, 1956's Blue Cat Blues, is narrated by Jerry in voiceover (voiced by Paul Frees) as they try to win back their ladyfriends. Both Tom and Jerry speak more than once in the 1943 short The Lonesome Mouse, while Jerry was voiced by Sara Berner during his appearance in the 1945 MGM musical Anchors AweighTom and Jerry: The Movie is the first (and so far only) installment of the series where the famous cat-and-mouse duos regularly speak. In that movie, Tom was voiced by Richard Kind, and Jerry was voiced by Dana Hill.

Ben 10

  Download Ben 10 Galactic Racing Full PC XBOX 360 ISO Download Ben 10 Galactic Racing Full Download Ben 10 Galactic Racing Full PC Xbox-360 Download Title: Ben 10: Galactic...

Ben 10 Protector of Earth

  Download PC Game Ben 10 Protector of Earth Full PC Game Download Full Game Ben 10: Protector of Earth Full Wii Game Free Ben 10: Protector of Earth Download Full PC | Wii...

Ben 10 Alien Force Game

  Download Ben 10 Alien Force Full PC PS2 Game Download Ben 10 Alien Force Game Full Version PC Ben 10 Alien Force Game Download Full PC Release Name: Ben_10_Alien_Force_Game Players:...

Ben 10 PC Games Download

  Download Ben 10 Games For PC Download Ben 10 Full Version Games Free Ben 10 Full PC Download Free Games * Ben 10 - Blockade Blitz Bounce balls to smash blocks and...


Gene Deitch era (1961–1962)

In 1960, MGM revived the Tom and Jerry franchise, and contacted European animation outfit Rembrandt Films to produce thirteen Tom and Jerry shorts overseas.[8][9][10][11] All thirteen shorts were directed by Prague-based animator Gene Deitch and produced by company owner William L. Snyder in Czechoslovakia.[8][11]
Deitch states that, being a member of the United Productions of America (UPA), he has always had a personal dislike of Tom and Jerry, citing them as the "primary bad example of senseless violence – humor based on pain – attack and revenge – to say nothing of the tasteless use of a headless black woman stereotype house servant."[12] Štěpán Koníček, a student of Karel Ančerland conductor of the Film Symphony Orchestra, and Václav Lídl provided the musical score for the Deitch short, while Larz Bourne, Chris Jenkyns, and Eli Bauer wrote the cartoons. The majority of vocal effects and voices in Deitch's films were provided by Allen Swift.[13]
For the purposes of avoiding being linked to Communism, Deitch altered the names for his crew in the opening credits of the shorts (e.g., Štěpán Koníček became "Steven Konichek", Václav Lídl became "Victor Little").[12] These shorts are among the few Tom and Jerry cartoons not to carry the "Made In Hollywood, U.S.A." phrase at the end.[12] Due to Deitch's studio being behind theIron Curtain, the production studio's location is omitted entirely on it.[12] In the midst of production, Joe Vogel, the head of production, was fired from MGM, who ordered Deitch and his team to finish the shorts and rush them out to release. The contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer expired,[12] and the final of the thirteen shorts, Carmen Get It!, was released on December 1, 1962.[9]
Tom pokes Jerry in High Steaks, one of the 13 films produced by the Deitch/Snyder team.
Since the Deitch/Snyder team had seen only a handful of the original Tom and Jerry shorts, and since Deitch and Snyder produced their cartoons on a tighter budget of $10,000, the resulting films were considered unusual, and, in many ways, bizarre.[9][12] The characters' gestures were often performed at high speed, frequently causing heavy motion blur. As a result, the animation of the characters looked choppy and sickly. The soundtracks featured sparse music, futuristic sound effects, dialogue that was mumbled rather than spoken, and heavy use of reverb. Fans that typically rooted for Tom criticized Deitch's cartoons for never having Tom become a threat to Jerry, mainly due to the constant intervention of his replacement owner – a corpulent, grumpy middle-aged white man (with serious temper problems, often going red in the face similar to Deitch's earlier "Clint Clobber"[14] character at Terrytoons), whom was also more graphically brutal in punishing Tom's mistakes as compared to Mammy Two-Shoes, by beating and thrashing Tom repeatedly, searing his face with a grill, and forcing Tom to drink an entire carbonated beverage. Despite their large lack of popularity, the Gene Deitch Tom and Jerrycartoons are still rerun today on the Cartoon Network and Boomerang channels on a semi-regular basis.[12]
Deitch's Tom and Jerry shorts have seen limited release outside of Europe and Asia; all thirteen shorts are currently available in Japan, where they have been ported to the Tom and Jerry & Droopy laserdisc and VHS, and the United Kingdom, where the shorts are available on the B-side of the Tom and Jerry: Classic Collection volume 5 DVD. The only three shorts to have seen DVD release in the United States are The Tom and Jerry Cartoon KitDown and Outing, and Carmen Get It!, where they are included on the Paws for a Holiday VHS and DVD,[15] Summer Holidays DVD and Musical Mayhem DVD.
All thirteen shorts were commercial successes; in 1961, the Tom and Jerry series became the highest-grossing film series of all-time, dethroning the Looney Tunes series which had held the position for sixteen years; this success was repeated once more in 1962.[11] However, unlike the Hanna and Barbera shorts, none of Deitch's films were nominated nor did they win an Academy Award.[11] The episodes created by Deitch have generally been less favorably received by audiences. In his review for Tom and Jerry: The Chuck Jones Collection, Paul Kupperberg of Comicmix called the shorts "perfectly dreadful" and "too often released", as well as a result of "cheap labor".[16] Deitch has frequently defended his films; in an interview with the New York Times, when asked about working on the Tom and Jerry series, Deitch responded "All the experts say [my shorts are] the worst of the 'Tom and Jerry', [...] I was a UPA man – my whole background was much closer to the Czechs. 'Tom and Jerry' I always considered dreck, but they had great timing, facial expressions, double takes, squash and stretch," all of which the interviewer stated were "techniques the Czechs had to learn," adding, "The Czech style had nothing in common with these gag-driven cartoons."[17]

Controversy

Like a number of other animated cartoons from the 1930s to the early 1950s, Tom and Jerry featured racial stereotypes. After explosions, for example, characters with blasted faces would resemble stereotypical blacks, with large lips and bow-tied hair. Perhaps the most controversial element of the show is the character Mammy Two Shoes, a poor black maid who speaks in a stereotypical "black accent" and has a rodent problem. Joseph Barbera, who was responsible for these gags, claimed that the racial gags in Tom and Jerry did not reflect his racial opinion; they were just reflecting what was common in society and cartoons at the time and were meant to be humorous.[6] Nevertheless, such stereotypes are considered by some to be racist today, and most of the blackface gags are cut when these shots are aired, even though Mouse in Manhattan was shown uncut on July 25, 2012 on Cartoon Network. Mammy Two-Shoes' voice was redubbed by Turner in the mid-1990s to make the character sound less stereotypical; the resulting accent sounds more Irish. One cartoon in particular, His Mouse Friday, is usually kept out of television rotation because of its depiction of cannibals. If shown, the cannibals' dialogue is edited out, although their mouths still move.
In Tom and Jerry's Spotlight Collection DVD, a disclaimer by Whoopi Goldberg warns viewers about the potentially offensive material in the cartoons and emphasizes that they were "wrong then and they are wrong today", borrowing a phrase from the Warner Bros. Golden collection. This disclaimer is also used in the Tom and Jerry Golden Collection: Volume 1.
Screen capture from the episode The Truce Hurts. The characters in this shot have turned into black stereotypes after a passing car splashed mud on their faces. Scenes such as this are frequently cut from modern broadcasts of Tom and Jerry

After the last of the Deitch cartoons were released, Chuck Jones, who had been fired from his thirty-plus year tenure at Warner Bros. Cartoons, started his own animation studio, Sib Tower 12 Productions, with partner Les Goldman. Beginning in 1963, Jones and Goldman went on to produce 34 more Tom and Jerry shorts, all of which carried Jones' distinctive style (and a slight psychedelic influence). However, despite being animated by essentially the same artists who worked with Jones at Warners, these new shorts had varying degrees of critical success.
Tom and Jerry title card for theChuck Jones shorts.
Jones had trouble adapting his style to Tom and Jerry's brand of humor, and a number of the cartoons favored full animation, personality and style over storyline. The characters underwent a slight change of appearance: Tom was given thicker eyebrows (resembling Jones' GrinchCount Blood Count) or Wile E Coyote, a less complex look (including the color of his fur becoming gray), sharper ears, longer tail and furrier cheeks (resembling Jones' Claude Cat or Sylvester), while Jerry was given larger eyes and ears, a lighter brown color, and a sweeter, Porky Pig-like expression.
Some of Jones' Tom and Jerry cartoons are reminiscent of his work with Wile E. Coyote and The Road Runner, included the uses of blackout gags and gags involving characters falling from high places. Jones co-directed the majority of the shorts with layout artist Maurice Noble. The remaining shorts were directed by Abe Levitow and Ben Washam, with Tom Ray directing two shorts built around footage from earlier Tom and Jerry cartoons directed by Hanna and Barbera, and Jim Pabian directed a short with Maurice Noble. Various vocal characteristics were made by Mel Blanc and June Foray. Jones' efforts are considered superior to the previous Deitch efforts (and most cartoons made during that time, albeit visually), and contain the memorable opening theme, in which Tom is trapped inside the "O" of his name.[18]
Though Jones managed to recapture some of the magic from the original Hanna-Barbera efforts, MGM ended production on Tom and Jerry in 1967, by which time Sib Tower 12 had become MGM Animation/Visual Arts. Jones had moved on to television specials and the feature film The Phantom Tollbooth.[18]

Tom Cat and Jerry Mouse

Thomas "Tom" Cat
Tom (called "Jasper" in his debut appearance) is a blue and white domestic shorthair cat. He usually lives a pampered life, although the characters usually live in several lifestyles, while Jerry is a small brown house mouse who always lives in close proximity to him. "Tom" is a generic name for a male cat (The Warner Bros. cartoon character Sylvester was originally named Thomas).[citation needed] Tom possesses surprising strength for his size, lifting items such as anvils with relative ease and withstanding considerable impacts with them. Despite the typical cat-eats-mouse scenario, it is surprisingly quite rare for Tom to actually try and consume Jerry; most of his attempts are just to torment or humiliate Jerry. Despite being very energetic and determined, Tom is no match for Jerry's brains and wits. By the final "fade-out" of each cartoon, Jerry usually emerges triumphant, while Tom is shown as the loser. However, other results may be reached; on rare occasions, Tom triumphs, usually when Jerry becomes the aggressor or when he crosses some sort of line (the best example of which occurs in The Million Dollar Cat where, after finding out that Tom's newly acquired wealth will be taken away if he harms any animal, including a mouse, he torments Tom until Tom finally loses his temper and attacks him). Sometimes, usually ironically, they both lose, usually when Jerry's last trap potentially backfires on him after it affects Tom (An example is in Chuck Jones' Filet Meow short where Jerry orders a shark to scare Tom away from eating a goldfish. Afterwards, the shark scares Jerry away as well) or when Jerry overlooks something at the end of the course. Sometimes, they both end up being friends (only for something to happen so that Tom will chase Jerry again). Both characters display sadistic tendencies, in that they are equally likely to take pleasure in tormenting each other. However, depending on the cartoon, whenever one character appears to be in mortal danger (in a dangerous situation or by a third party), the other will develop a conscience and save him. Sometimes, they bond over a mutual sentiment towards an unpleasant experience and their attacking each other is more play than serious attacks. Multiple shorts show the two getting along with minimal difficulty, and they are more than capable of working together when the situation calls for it, usually against a third party who manages to torture and humiliate them both. Sometimes this partnership is forgotten quickly when an unexpected event happens or when one character feels that the other is no longer necessary. (Example is when in Posse Cat, when Jerry decides to pretend to get chased by Tom in exchange for half his food. Tom agrees to this, but then he goes back on his word later.) Other times however, Tom does keep his promise to Jerry and the partnerships are not quickly dissolved after the problem is solved.
Tom changes his love interest many times. The first love interest is Toots who appears in Puss n' Toots, and calls him "Tommy" in The Mouse Comes to Dinner. He is also interested in a cat called Toots in The Zoot Cat although she has a different appearance to the original Toots. The most frequent love interest of Tom's is Toodles Galore, who never has any dialogue in the cartoons.
Despite five shorts ending with a depiction of Tom's apparent death, his demise is never permanent; he even reads about his own death in a flashback in Jerry's Diary. He appears to die in explosions in Mouse Trouble (after which he is seen in heaven), Yankee Doodle Mouse and in Safety Second, while in The Two Mouseketeers he is guillotined offscreen.