Herbie (franchise)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Herbie_(franchise) an entity of type: Thing

La Coccinelle (Herbie) est une série de six films, un téléfilm et une série télévisée produits par Walt Disney Pictures avec comme héroïne une coccinelle, surnom français de l'automobile construite par Volkswagen. L'artiste d'effets spéciaux Danny Lee, qui a travaillé sur les quatre films et conçu les modifications du véhicule, précise que c'est un modèle de 1964 et que 26 exemplaires ont été utilisé sur le film La Coccinelle à Mexico (1980), la plupart trouvée dans l'agglomération de Los Angeles. rdf:langString
The Herbie franchise (also known as The Love Bug franchise) consists of American race car-sport family-comedies, including five theatrical feature films, one television film, a television series, and other multimedia releases. The overall story centers around the titular Herbie, a sentient anthropomorphic 1963 Volkswagen Beetle with a mind of his own and capable of driving himself. The vehicle is often times a legitimate contender, though the underdog contestant in competitive races, but to a greater degree assists his human owners in bettering their lives. rdf:langString
rdf:langString La Coccinelle (série de films)
rdf:langString Herbie (franchise)
rdf:langString Herbie
rdf:langString Herbie
xsd:integer 61833811
xsd:integer 1123481450
rdf:langString
rdf:langString ~$70,000,000
rdf:langString Official home video release, boxset collection artwork
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString
rdf:langString ~$279,639,816
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Frank De Vol
rdf:langString Shirley Walker
rdf:langString Mark Mothersbaugh Marco Beltrami
xsd:integer 1969
xsd:integer 1997
rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Herbie franchise (also known as The Love Bug franchise) consists of American race car-sport family-comedies, including five theatrical feature films, one television film, a television series, and other multimedia releases. The overall story centers around the titular Herbie, a sentient anthropomorphic 1963 Volkswagen Beetle with a mind of his own and capable of driving himself. The vehicle is often times a legitimate contender, though the underdog contestant in competitive races, but to a greater degree assists his human owners in bettering their lives. The first film, notable for being the final live-action film approved by Walt Disney prior to his death, was released in 1969. Based on a short story titled "Car, Boy, Girl", the feature proved to be a critical and financial success for Walt Disney Productions. Upon its release, the movie was the second highest grossing motion picture for the company, second only to Mary Poppins. Its performance placed it fourth highest on box office returns, and spawned a franchise. Each of the subsequent releases were successes in their own right, but none received as much universal praise as the original. The second film was met with mixed critical reception, while notably it is to-date the highest critically scored film in the series. The third film was met with mixed reception, while the fourth film was poorly received and is often classified as the weakest Herbie film. The television series was panned by critics, resulting in a cancellation following five episodes, with reviews calling it "domesticated", "mild", and "boring". The fifth film, which sought to reveal the titular hero's origin, was met with negative reviews, citing its inferiority to the original. The sixth film was met with mixed reception, and garnered the highest box office returns out of all of the installments. Though the film was criticized for various aspects including the plot, it was seen as a return to form for the franchise.
rdf:langString La Coccinelle (Herbie) est une série de six films, un téléfilm et une série télévisée produits par Walt Disney Pictures avec comme héroïne une coccinelle, surnom français de l'automobile construite par Volkswagen. L'artiste d'effets spéciaux Danny Lee, qui a travaillé sur les quatre films et conçu les modifications du véhicule, précise que c'est un modèle de 1964 et que 26 exemplaires ont été utilisé sur le film La Coccinelle à Mexico (1980), la plupart trouvée dans l'agglomération de Los Angeles.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 48970
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<usDollar> 2.79639816E8

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