Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Trisha Hot Songs Hd 1080p Blu-ray Tamil WORK

3 views
Skip to first unread message

Aline Lanosga

unread,
Jan 25, 2024, 5:50:11 PMJan 25
to
<div>The soundtrack of the film was released on 29 March 2012 at Shilpakala Vedika in Hyderabad. M. M. Keeravani's music label, Vel Records, and Sony Music Entertainment secured the film's audio rights. The lyrics for all the songs were written by Chandrabose.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Swift has spent the past year on the Speak Now World Tour in support of her third album, which debuted last October atop the Billboard 200, selling over a million copies in its first week. All 14 tracks on the country-pop juggernaut were composed by Swift, and she made Hot 100 history by charting 11 songs off the album in a single week.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>trisha hot songs hd 1080p blu-ray tamil</div><div></div><div>Download File: https://t.co/v5pqOX94Cx </div><div></div><div></div><div>This pun-laden piece is clearly aimed at kids, but it holds some thematic worth and the HD glimpses of flicks not yet on Blu-ray (like The Lion King, Finding Nemo, and Pocahontas) will appeal to HD-loving animation fans.The Blu-ray also holds Timon & Pumbaa's Blu-ray 3D pitch (4:23) and the studio's standard digital copy how-to (1:04).Illogically, "Unlikely Friends" is not included on either DVD, but they each retain two extras from their films' previous releases (that aren't found on the Blu-ray).On the original movie, we get a "Best of Friends" sing-along (2:30). Happily, rather than just the clips from the movie with subtitles, this is the vintage, nostalgia-inducing Disney Sing Along Songs segment (from 1993's Friend Like Me), with fuzzy, fullscreen picture and a Mickey head graphic bouncing on lyrics as they are uttered.More noteworthy is "Passing the Baton" (6:38), a short featurette that celebrates Fox and the Hound as the film that saw classic Disney animators hand over the reins to the young talent that would lead the studio's 1990s Renaissance. We hear from the old guard (Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston) and those to whom they passed the baton (Randy Cartwright, Glen Keane, Ron Clements, John Musker). We also get a look at Pearl Bailey recording "Best of Friends", while an animator draws her character. This piece dates back at least to 2001 and probably a little earlier than that and, though good, it is insufficient as the only making-of extra on the original film. The first of the two extras on The Fox and the Hound 2's DVD is the music video for Lucas Grabeel's end credits song "You Know I Will" (3:34). It features the High School Musical actor singing and also filming, lighting, and sound-mixing himself, in between the requisite movie clips. The video's design is inexplicably vain, but at least it has memorable personality, something missing from too many of today's movie song music videos."Making the Music" (10:07) finds the sequel's filmmakers, cast, composers, and crooners (including Trisha Yearwood) discussing the songs and score in the movie, each overstating one another's achievements. That this is the only featurette on the follow-up shows where its makers' minds were.The Blu-ray and both FastPlay-enhanced DVDs open with trailers for The Lion King: Diamond Edition, Spooky Buddies: The Curse of the Howlloween Hound, and Dumbo: 70th Anniversary Edition. The DVDs add a fourth ad, promoting Beauty and the Beast: Belle's Magical World Special Edition. The disc-openers are repeated by a "Sneak Peeks" listing, followed by promos for Disney Movie Rewards, Tinker Bell and the Pixie Hollow Games, "Jake and the Never Land Pirates", Mars Needs Moms, Tinker Bell and the Mysterious Winter Woods, and Bambi II.WHAT'S MISSING?Amazingly, these DVDs lose a number of items from the films' previous DVDs. From its 25th Anniversary DVD, the original movie loses the "DVD storybook" read-along "New Best Friends", the hide-and-seek "Forest Friendship Game", the bonus shorts Lambert the Sheepish Lion (1952) and Lend a Paw (1941), and, least excusably, a 51-still photo and art gallery. Already dropped and not resurfacing from its original Gold Collection DVD are a trivia game, a 1988 rerelease trailer, and the booklet "Let's Be Friends." Not carried over from The Fox and the Hound 2's only DVD are the bonus short Goofy and Wilbur (1939), the Disney DVD Game World: Disney Dogs Edition demo, and the Mutt Mix Master activity. Disney has curiously gone from viewing set-top games as a requisite animated film bonus feature to things not worth recycling from one DVD edition to the next. Clearly, disc space was not an issue, with both new DVDs checking in well under dual-layered (DVD-9) capacity. Aside from the art gallery, trailer, and somewhat random bonus cartoons, this material doesn't seem to warrant lamenting, but it's odd for so much of it to be dropped just five years later. MENUS, PACKAGING and DESIGNLamely, the Blu-ray's menu takes its imagery from the sequel, showing Tod and Cooper playing around outside a house window while the listings appear on hanged stitchwork. The Blu-ray doesn't support bookmarks and though it does remember where you left play off, you have to get through all of the pre-menu items first. The timeline that appears when fast-forwarding or rewinding creatively charts progress by adding whipped cream to the pieces of pie representing chapters you have passed. The original movie's DVD adds "Best of Friends" to its comparable main menu. Its secondary selection screens feature different characters against the same wallpaper and stitchwork design, while other score excerpts play. The sequel's menus are recycled from its original DVD release, featuring Tod and Copper playing in front of carnival sights.The packaging does its part to further downgrade DVD. Those two gray discs are unusually stacked, one atop the other on one side of a standard slim Blu-ray case and covered by Disney Movie Rewards and Disney Blu-ray 3D/combo pack booklets. The case is topped by a cardboard slipcover that adds extensive embossing and tasteful holography to the artwork it repeats. (As you'd hope, it gives the second spine to Copper.) Those who collect and proudly display the Disney animated classics will be disappointed to find the sequel's title sharing both of the slipcover's spines with the original. CLOSING THOUGHTSThe Fox and the Hound might not rank among Disney's most beloved animated movies, but it still compares favorably to most of cinema, its mature tone, touching story, and classical visuals holding up well. The unnecessary and incompatible sequel is a much lesser film, lending itself to no more than a curiosity viewing. At least it is included at no cost above Disney's standard single animated classic price point.This 2-movie, 3-disc collection is one of the more curious releases I've come across from any studio. The decision not to repeat bonus features across the two formats is odd, as is the one to leave off many of the films' past DVD extras. No matter what format you prefer, the design won't fully satisfy you. And yet, the original movie finally gets the widescreen presentation it apparently should, looking absolutely stunning to boot. If all the rest is just gravy to you, then you shouldn't hesitate to pick up this set.Support this site when you buy now from Amazon.com...</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>2 Movie Collection: Blu-ray + 2 DVDs / 2 DVDs / Blu-ray + 2 DVDs in DVD Packaging</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Just The Fox and the Hound: Gold Collection DVD / 25th Anniversary DVD / Instant Video</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Just The Fox and the Hound 2: Original DVD / Instant Video</div><div></div><div> dd2b598166</div>
0 new messages