Candy Kong Rule 34

Candy Kong Rule 34




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Candy Kong Rule 34
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Computer-animated television series

Canada
France (Season 1)
China (Season 2)


^ Solomon, Charles (1 June 1999). "An Emmy Awards Debate: What Makes 'Donkey Kong' Run?" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 31 December 2020 .

^ "Nelvana wraps up annual general meeting" . Playback Online .

^ "Hunka Hunka Burnin' Bluster" . Super Mario Wiki . Retrieved 17 June 2020 .

^ "RS-Doublage" .

^ "Planète Jeunesse - Donkey Kong" . planete-jeunesse.com . Retrieved 2017-01-12 .

^ "Fox Kids Saturday Morning Lineups (1998-1999) The Kids Block Blog" . wordpress.com. 2011-06-07 . Retrieved 2017-01-11 .

^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 277–278. ISBN 978-1476665993 .

^ "Donkey Kong Country: The Legend Of The Crystal Coconut - Your VHS Collector" . vhscollector.com . Retrieved 2017-03-12 .

^ "Amazon.com Donkey Kong Country: He Came, He Saw, He Kong-quered" . Amazon . July 2016 . Retrieved 2017-10-13 .

^ "Amazon.com: Donkey Kong Country: Season 1" . Amazon . July 2016 . Retrieved 2017-10-13 .

^ Devore, Jordan (September 15, 2021). "DKC: Curse of the Crystal Coconut is an inspired animated tribute to Donkey Kong Country" . Destructoid . Retrieved April 2, 2022 .

^ Craddock, Ryan (June 4, 2020). "Random: Pirate Metal Band Alestorm's Latest Album Features Several Donkey Kong References" . Nintendo Life . Retrieved July 8, 2020 .

^ Olney, Alex (25 April 2018). "Video: Donkey Kong Tropical Freeze's New Easter Egg is Only On Switch" . Nintendo Life . Nintendo Life . Retrieved 18 May 2021 .



Cruel Summer (since 2021)
Everything's Trash (since 2022)
Good Trouble (since 2019)
Grown-ish (since 2018)
Motherland: Fort Salem (since 2020)
Single Drunk Female (since 2022)


Amateur Hour (revival) (1992)
Big Brother Jake (1990–94)
Donkey Kong Country (1998–2001)
Great Pretenders (1999–2002)
Home & Family (1996–98)
Maniac Mansion (1990–93)
Monster Farm (1998–99)
Ohh Nooo! Mr. Bill Presents (1998–99)
Shop 'til You Drop (1996–97)
Zorro (1990–93)


Doomsday Brothers 1
The Télétoon Show 1, 3


1 Teletoon at Night/Télétoon la nuit/ Adult Swim series
2 Teletoon-produced only
3 Télétoon-produced only
4 Moved to Cartoon Network
5 Moved to Treehouse TV
6 Moved to Family
7 Moved to La Chaîne Disney

Donkey Kong Country is a computer animated musical television series that was loosely based on the Nintendo franchise Donkey Kong . The series was co-produced by Nelvana , Medialab Studio L.A. (Season 1) and Hong Guang Animation (Season 2), in association with WIC Entertainment , with the participation of Teletoon —for Season 1, it was produced in co-production with France 2 , Canal+ , in association with Valar 4.

The show was first introduced in France on September 4, 1996, on France 2 , on a block titled La Planète de Donkey Kong ( The Planet of Donkey Kong ). Later, the show premiered as a full series on August 15, 1997, until the final episode's ending on July 7, 2000.

Donkey Kong Country was one of the earliest television shows to be entirely animated with motion capture technology. [1] Several elements of the series, such as the Crystal Coconut, appeared in later Donkey Kong video games like Donkey Kong 64 , which was released three years after the show began airing on television. The second season was produced by Taiwanese CGI studio CGCG —which updated the character models , silkier lighting , and used key framing —having been announced as early as May 1999. [2]

The show that focuses on Donkey Kong , who happens to find a magic coconut called the Crystal Coconut, which grants wishes and is capable of answering questions asked of it. Donkey Kong is the protector of the Crystal Coconut, which is housed in Cranky Kong 's Cabin. King K. Rool and his minions want to steal the Crystal Coconut from Donkey Kong and the company in order to rule Kongo Bongo Island. Try as they may, King K. Rool and his minions do not succeed in stealing the Crystal Coconut. Each episode features two songs performed by the show's characters.

These characters originated from Donkey Kong Country and Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest . However, some of them went through some design changes.

These characters only appeared in the show.

Season 1 of the French version was done in Quebec, with the exception of Donkey Kong, Diddy Kong [4] and Funky Kong's voice actors who are from France. Season 2 was not given a French version until later when it got released on DVD years afterward, which had a new voice cast and it was done in France, with DK and Funky's voice actors reprising their character roles. Hervé Grull never returned as Diddy Kong, as he had long since hit puberty, replaced by Lucile Boulanger as a result. [5]

The background music made for the show has since appeared for sale on various stock music websites in the form of music packs:

Donkey Kong Country was first introduced in France on September 4, 1996, on France 2 , on a block titled La Planète de Donkey Kong ( The Planet of Donkey Kong ). The French-language version of the show later premiered in Canada on Télétoon on September 8, 1997, making the series one of the channel's launch programs, while the English version premiered on its English counterpart on October 17, 1997, also as a launch program. In the U.S., it was one of the first series to be shown on Fox Family (now Freeform), in which the series was broadcast in its entirety from August 15, 1998 (the same day Fox Family was launched) until 2000. It was also seen on Fox Kids from 1998 to 1999 for a very short time airing two episodes as specials on December 19, 1998, and aired a few more episodes during the summer of 1999 before being taken off. [6] 40 episodes were produced. [7] In Japan, the series aired with a Japanese dub and took over TV Tokyo 's 6:30 p.m. time-slot from Gokudo the Adventurer airing on October 1, 1999, and was later replaced with Hamtaro after ending on June 30, 2000.

Over the years, the series has been released throughout many VHS and DVDs in several countries. In total, 13 DVDs around the world were released with English audio.

For North America, four episodes of Donkey Kong Country that feature Kaptain Skurvy were edited together into a videocassette release titled Donkey Kong Country: The Legend of the Crystal Coconut and was marketed as a feature-length anthology film. However, these episodes are not in chronological order, as a flashback shown in the third episode actually occurs in the fourth episode of the tape. It was released in Canada around 1997 with both English and French dub tapes separately with distribution handled by Seville Pictures and Nelvana themselves as the secondary distributor. [8] The United States version of the tape was distributed by Paramount Home Video and was released in the nation on November 9, 1999, marking this the only time that the U.S. had a VHS release of this series. France has gotten a release of this tape as well under: Donkey Kong Le Film!

In Japan, the TV series was very popular and proven to be successful, since the video game that the series is based on was also a hit. It was also because the Japanese dubbed version of the series was produced with a very high budget thus investing to having a big-name well known voice cast. On top of that, the Japanese and also the Latin Spanish dub editions had ad-libbed a lot of extra humour that were not in the original scripts. The Japanese dubbed version of the entire series has been released on home video through Rental VHS tapes in 2000. Shogakukan Video has released all the episodes of the series spreading through 13 volumes and they were sold by Nippon Columbia , a record label company. Each tape contains three episodes each and in consistent order of its Japanese broadcasting on TV Tokyo , with the exception of its series' final episode, Message in a Bottle Show was not included due to mostly being a clip episode. However, that episode was later introduced as part of another TV Tokyo program which is a quiz show known as Ohashi.

In the PAL regions, Donkey Kong Country Vol.1 (released in Australia) and Donkey Kong Country - Bad Hair Day (released in the United Kingdom) were released on DVD. The other two DVDs, Donkey Kong Country: Hooray for Holly Kongo Bongo and Donkey Kong Country: The Kongo Bongo Festival of Lights (both released in Australia) only held one episode. After over three years of no new English DVD, I Spy With My Hairy Eye was released in the United Kingdom in 2008.

Finally in 2013, Phase 4 Films , a small Canadian low-budget film company, officially purchased the rights to license and distribute the series for a DVD release in Region 1 along with Sony Pictures Home Entertainment and began releasing episodes starting off with the He Came, He Saw, He Kong-quered DVD that was released on August 20, 2013. The Complete First Season was then released on DVD in Region 1 on May 12, 2015. [9] [10]

In 2017, Pidax Film has gotten the distribution rights in Germany to release all fourteen episodes of Season 2 on DVD with English and German dubbing audio included. Germany still has yet to get a release of the first season.

As of 2022, the show is now added on the Tubi streaming service.

The episodes of the show are all available on iTunes and on the Amazon Prime's Ameba channel. The first two seasons are available on Freevee and on Amazon Video with advertisements.

39 of 40 episodes are available on Retro Rerun's YouTube channel.

The show had a large line of merchandise in Japan , including a manga and collectible card game featuring drawings of characters—some of which never appeared in the series. The card game was later adapted to be based on Donkey Kong 64 .

Pirate's Scorn, a song from the show, was covered by Scottish heavy metal band Alestorm in their Curse of the Crystal Coconut album. This cover of Pirate's Scorn was also included in DKC: Curse of the Crystal Coconut , an animated fan tribute to the show. [11] Additionally, the album artwork contains several nods to the Donkey Kong video game franchise. [12]

In the Nintendo Switch version of Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze , the "banana slamma" catchphrase is used in one of Tawks' lines when visiting Funky's Fly 'n Buy while playing as Funky Kong, paying an homage to the animated series. [13]

Jacques Goldstein Philippe Percebois
"Donkey Kong Country" (Instrumental)
Dale A. Andrews Patrick Loubert Michael Hirsh Clive Smith Gérard Mital (Season 1 only) Jacques Peyrache (Season 1 only)
Maia Tubiana (Season 1) Stephen Hodgins (Season 1; supervising producer, Season 2) Patricia R. Burns (Season 1; supervising producer, Season 2) Pam Lehn (Season 2)
Teletoon (Canada) France 2 and Canal+ (France, Season 1)
August 15, 1997 ( 1997-08-15 ) – July 7, 2000 ( 2000-07-07 )
Lucile Boulanger Donald Reignoux (singing voice)

Tokuyoshi Kawashima Toshitaka Hirano Takayuki Yamaguchi Daiki Nakamura Tomohisa Aso

NLV 146: Music for Silly Moments Vol. 2

NLV 148: Peaceful Jazzy Feeling Vol. 2

The Legend of the Crystal Coconut (English) Donkey Kong Country: La Légende de la noix de coco en cristal (French)
1997 (Canada) November 9, 1999 (USA)
Includes Legend of the Crystal Coconut , Bug a Boogie , Ape-Nesia , and Booty and the Beast edited together in a feature-length format. A French dub release for Canada was also released.

French dubbed version of the Legend of the Crystal Coconut compilation feature, release for France.

ドンキーコング Vol. 1 (Donkey Kong Vol. 1)
Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 1-3 ( Bad Hair Day , Ape Foo Young and Booty and the Beast ).

ドンキーコング Vol. 2 (Donkey Kong Vol. 2)
Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 4-6 ( Barrel, Barrel... Who's Got the Barrel , Kong for a Day and Raiders of the Lost Banana ).

ドンキーコング Vol. 3 (Donkey Kong Vol. 3)
Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 7-9 ( From Zero to Hero , Buried Treasure and Cranky's Tickle Tonic ).

ドンキーコング Vol. 4 (Donkey Kong Vol. 4)
Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 10-12 ( Orangutango , Double Date Trouble and The Curse of Kongo Bongo ).

Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 13-15 ( Speed , Get a Life, Don't Save One and The Big Chill Out ).

Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 16-18 ( To the Moon Baboon , I Spy with My Hairy Eye and Klump's Lumps ).

Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 19-21 ( Kong Fu , Bluster's Sale Ape-Stravaganza and Legend of the Crystal Coconut ).

Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 22-24 ( Watch the Skies , Bug a Boogie and Baby Kong Blues ).

Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 25-27 ( Ape-Nesia , A Thin Line Between Love & Ape and The Day the Island Stood Still ).

ドンキーコング Vol.10 (Donkey Kong Vol. 10)
Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 28-30 ( Hooray for Holly-Kongo Bongo , The Kongo Bongo Festival of Lights and Speak No Evil, Dude ).

ドンキーコング Vol.11 (Donkey Kong Vol. 11)
Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 31-33 ( Monkey Seer, Monkey Do , Four Weddings and a Coconut and Vote of Kong-Fidence ).

ドンキーコング Vol.12 (Donkey Kong Vol. 12)
Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 34-36 ( Follow That Coconut , The Big Switch-A-Roo and Hunka Hunka Burnin' Bluster ).

ドンキーコング Vol.13 (Donkey Kong Vol. 13)
Includes Japanese dubbed versions of Episodes 37-39 ( Best of Enemies , Just Kidding and It's a Wonderful Life ).

Includes Hooray for Holly-Kongo Bongo , The Kongo Bongo Festival of Lights , Speak No Evil, Dude and The Day the Island Stood Still .

Includes The Kongo Bongo Festival of Lights and Hooray for Holly-Kongo Bongo .

Includes Speak No Evil, Dude and The Day the Island Stood Still .

Includes Monkey Seer, Monkey Do and Four Weddings and a Coconut .

Includes Bad Hair Day , Ape Foo Young , Booty and the Beast and Barrel, Barrel... Who's Got the Barrel .

Includes I Spy with My Hairy Eye , Baby Kong Blues and The Kongo Bongo Festival of Lights .

Includes Raiders of the Lost Banana , Barrel, Barrel... Who's Got the Barrel , Kong for a Day , From Zero to Hero and Buried Treasure .

Includes Bad Hair Day , Ape Foo Young , Booty and the Beast and Barrel, Barrel... Who's Got the Barrel .

Includes Raiders of the Lost Banana , Kong for a Day , From Zero to Hero and Buried Treasure .

Includes Kong Fu , Get a Life, Don't Save One , Cranky's Tickle Tonic and Orangutango .

Includes Legend of the Crystal Coconut , Bluster's Sale Ape-Stravaganza , Klump's Lumps and Speed .

Includes all 26 episodes from season 1.

Includes all 14 episodes from season 2.



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