Charlie Cooper is a special agent of the future - the mind of a man running entirely on a computer, able to transfer his consciousness to bio-mechanical bodies at will. But when a computer virus corrupts his system, he must face one of his greatest challenges yet: mortality.
Lizzie Dripping was a British television children's programme produced by the BBC in 1973 and 1975. It was written by Helen Cresswell and set in the country village of Little Hemlock, where a young girl, Penelope, with a vivid imagination encounters a local witch whom only she can see and hear. This singular ability is further complicated by the fact that Penelope has established a reputation for being an imaginative liar, making it even more difficult for her to convince others that her witch is real.
It tells the story of a young man, Cheng Dalei, who accidentally entered the world of the game system and became the head of a village, embarking on an adventurous journey of revitalizing the dilapidated village, managing the catering industry, and resisting...
The Last Dragon, known as Dragons: A Fantasy Made Real in the United States, and also known as Dragon's World in other countries, is a docufiction made by Animal Planet that is described as the story of "the natural history of the most extraordinary creature that never existed".
It posits a speculative evolution of dragons from the Cretaceous period up to the 15th century, and suppositions about what dragon life and behavior might have been like if they had existed and evolved. It uses the premise that the ubiquity of dragons in world mythology suggests that dragons could have existed. They are depicted as a scientifically feasible species of reptile that could have evolved, similar to the depiction of dragons in the Dragonology series of books. The dragons featured in the show were designed by John Sibbick.
The program switches between two stories. The first uses CGI to show the dragons in their natural habitat throughout history. The second shows the story of a modern day scientist at a museum, Dr. Tanner, who
After a car accident leaves Lin Yu in a coma, her lover Ding Chongxi uploads her consciousness into a virtual world, where he tries to awaken her through dreams, only for love and loss to collide as her body nears its limit.
Comic artist Yuan Qiyou becomes trapped in a romance system based on her own work and must complete tasks to avoid being stuck inside the comic. Assigned to win over gamer Rong Yi, she navigates a series of comedic misunderstandings that gradually turn into genuine affection. As their relationship deepens, an unexpected complication arises during the final mission.
It's hard being a hard-boiled detective and a Kamen Rider, especially when you have such an annoying girl who owns your detective agency. Shotaro often lets his mind wander following some of Kamen Rider W's most memorable cases.
Yeesa Cheung, born on a leap day, believes her birthday is squeezed between 28 February and 1 March in common years. When she celebrates her birthday in 2017, she unexpectedly travels to 29 February 2020 in Sapporo. There she is greeted by two strangers, Ryan Ma and Yu Ka-chung, and finds her future self killed in a traffic accident. After she returns to 2017, only one second has passed, but the three have now to work together to circumvent their common destiny.
In a world where being invisible is the norm, fainthearted Kurtulus finds himself in the middle of an explosion that would turn him visible, which set by the villain boss Esref Serif.
When Yu Xingchen learns that his first love Su Ruo has died, he’s suddenly pulled into a time vortex that sends him fifteen years into the past. Now back in high school, he finds Su Ruo alive at eighteen. As he relives their youth, he revisits forgotten moments and uncovers hidden clues about her fate. Caught between the past and present, Yu Xingchen must solve the mystery of her death—before time runs out and he loses her forever.
Join Zed, Addison, Willa, and the rest of their friends in a series of shorts that are jam-packed with music, adventure, fun, and...a carnivorous plant monster?! Will they get trapped in a never-ending summer time-loop and try to sing their way out? Probably! Will they face off against a horrifying mega-cricket??? Again, probably! From the summery to the spooky, our beloved Seabrook crew will take on everything from evil clones to a party-crashing "Solstice Slasher," and still have time to hang out and have fun together.
Su Tang and her husband run an art gallery together and seem to have a perfect, loving marriage that everyone is envious of. But what if one day you discovered that the person sleeping next to you is a terrifying serial murderer, what would you do? One step forward is destruction, one step backward is sweetness. There is only a thin line between the man you love and the terrifying killer. Su Tang, can you tell the face of love?
Oscar's Orchestra is a British children's animated TV series that ran from 1994 to 1996 comprising a total of three seasons and 39 episodes. The series was produced by the popular British animation studio Collingwood O'Hare Entertainment in association with Warner Music Vision and Europe Images and was originally shown on the BBC as part of the children's block CBBC. It has also aired on the British children's cable networks The Children's Channel and Nickleodeon, France 2 in France and ABC in Australia.
It is set in the distant future, in the year 2743 in a city called New Vienna, and was about a talking piano called Oscar, who rebels against the evil dictator of the world, Thaddius Vent, who has banned music. Oscar and his fellow musical instruments plot against Vent and his henchmen, Lucius and Tank, and his soothsayer, Goodtooth, who always says: 'You screamed, master!'. The voice of Oscar was provided by Dudley Moore.
Once a renowned feng shui master, Mo Mo-che loses his powers after a failed ritual unleashes 108 evil spirits. Reduced to a struggling fortune teller, he tries to move on until a series of supernatural deaths force him to confront his past and stop the growing menace.