Teenage Mutant Turtles

Teenage Mutant Turtles




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Teenage Mutant Turtles
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Fully supported English (United States) Partially supported Français (Canada) Français (France) Deutsch (Deutschland) हिंदी (भारत) Italiano (Italia) Português (Brasil) Español (España) Español (México)
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990)
Watch "Patriot" Star Michael Dorman Crushes on 'The Princess Bride'
Kevin Eastman (characters) Peter Laird (characters) Bobby Herbeck (story) (screenplay)
Robin Williams , who was a big fan of the franchise, provided Judith Hoag with information regarding her character through his comic book collection; the two were co-starring in Cadillac Man (1990) when the Turtles film went into production.
When Raph and Leo are arguing in April's apartment, there is a crew member with an orange baseball hat on trying to hide under the table.
The film title appears from behind the corner of the sewer, just before the Turtles come around it and are fully seen for the first time.
German theatrical version was based on the cut British version. In addition it was heavily dimmed and cartoon-like sound effects were added to the fight scenes. This version was also used for TV airings and VHS home video releases. Only in 2010 the film was released uncut on DVD.
Tequila Written by Danny Flores Courtesy of Mask, Inc.
The heroes in a half-shell go live-action
The once-very-popular Turtles, who are trained in the martial arts courtesy of their master, a rat named Splinter, are duty-bound to save the city from a group of youths that are known as The Foot, who have been stealing and committing crimes within the area. They end up befriending a young reporter named April O'Neill, who reads the news on the local TV station, after she is rescued from an attack from The Foot. Once she is home our shelled friends find that The Foot has captured Splinter, and so must rescue him and face the might of The Foot's leader -- Shredder! I was already familiar with the cartoon series (that had apparently been censored somewhat on its arrival in the UK for fear that children would copy the martial artistry), so I was a little dubious as to whether this would work in live-action. Strangely enough, even when I saw it for the first time in 1991, aged 18, I enjoyed it! It was brilliantly done, Shredder looked particularly menacing (as did his right-hand man Tatsu), and Splinter's voice sometimes moved you almost to tears, especially with the charming musical score. The martial arts action is quite well done (although Michelangelo did not have his Nunchaku weapon that his comic-book and video game version does), and the dark look of the whole thing suits it perfectly. This is certainly worth a look.
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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie
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What is the Japanese language plot outline for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990)?
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Four teenage mutant ninja turtles emerge from the shadows to protect New York City from a gang of criminal ninjas. Four teenage mutant ninja turtles emerge from the shadows to protect New York City from a gang of criminal ninjas. Four teenage mutant ninja turtles emerge from the shadows to protect New York City from a gang of criminal ninjas.
Donatello : You're a claustrophobic.
Casey Jones : You want a fist in the mouth? I've never even looked at another guy before.

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Fully supported English (United States) Partially supported Français (Canada) Français (France) Deutsch (Deutschland) हिंदी (भारत) Italiano (Italia) Português (Brasil) Español (España) Español (México)
TV Series 1987–1996 1987–1996 TV-Y7 TV-Y7 23 m
Kevin Eastman (based on the Mirage Comics "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" comic books created by) Peter Laird (based on the Mirage Comics "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" comic books created by) David Wise (series developed by)
Kevin Eastman (based on the Mirage Comics "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" comic books created by) Peter Laird (based on the Mirage Comics "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" comic books created by) David Wise (series developed by)
10 seasons 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 See all
10 years 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 See all
Watch Trailer: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Season 7
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Machine Malfunction
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Battle Nexus
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Cowabunga, Shredhead
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Super Rocksteady And
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Season 7
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Season 1
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Season 5
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Clip 1
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Clip 2
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Case Of The Killer Pizzas
Watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Hollywood Dudes Series
Kevin Eastman (based on the Mirage Comics "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" comic books created by) Peter Laird (based on the Mirage Comics "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" comic books created by) David Wise (series developed by)
In the original comics, all four turtles had red bandanas. For the TV show, TMNT creator Peter Laird decided to give each Turtle a different color to make it easier to tell them apart: Leonardo has a blue bandana, Raphael a red bandana, Donatello a purple bandana and Michelangelo an orange bandana. This color scheme became so popular it eventually became a staple of the TMNT saga.
In many of the earlier episodes, a specific turtle's line would come out of the wrong character's mouth (i.e., Leonardo speaking with Raphael's voice).
In 1991, CBS aired the show during their Saturday Morning line-up, with all new episodes and a new opening was added too. Along with the package came 'Turtle Tips', a portion of the show that gave useful information.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Theme Composed by Chuck Lorre and Dennis C. Brown
80s quality cartoon carried into the 90s
This was probably the cartoon that saved the animation of the 90s from being really awful. The last of the great, great 80s cartoons. Great writing, great characters, voice talent, stories, humour. This is only reiterated by its long running air time in syndication, and its slot on CBS Saturday morning. I remember the syndicated episodes and the CBS episodes being slightly different. Now for my real beef: Don't be fooled by the remakes and redoings, live-action, animated or otherwise of TMNT that you see now a days. They're all INFERIOR products compared to the original 80s cartoon. If you want to see the quality that was TMNT...you must see the 1987 syndicated and CBS series.
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What is the Italian language plot outline for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987)?
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Mutant heroes live in New York sewers and train in martial arts to protect the city from crime. Mutant heroes live in New York sewers and train in martial arts to protect the city from crime. Mutant heroes live in New York sewers and train in martial arts to protect the city from crime.
Chorus : [series theme song] Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Heroes in a half-shell - Turtle power! They're the world's most fearsome fighting team! They're heroes in a half-shell and they're green! / When the evil Shredder attacks, These turtle boys don't cut him no slack! Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! Splinter taught them to be ninja teens! / Leonardo leads, Donatello does machines! / Raphael is cool but rude! / Michelangelo is a party dude! / Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Heroes in a half-shell - turtle power!

Jonathan Liebesman - director See profile
Producers Michael Bay , Andrew Form , Brad Fuller , Galen Walker , Scott Mednick , more… Ian Bryce , Denis L. Stewart , Eric Crown , Napoleon Smith , Jason T. Reed Studio Paramount Pictures Rating PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned) Content advisory Foul language , violence Purchase rights Stream instantly Details Format Prime Video (streaming online video) Devices Available to watch on supported devices
MacJunegrand Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2014
EDITED AFTER ACQUIRING BLU RAY AND REWATCHING: Before writing this I'm going to make a little mention of where I come from. I'm a huge TMNT fan. It all started with the 80's cartoon, but then I read the current comics, and saw the 2003 cartoon, which I also loved. Then I got the original B&W comics and loved those even more. I loved the first and second TMNT live-action films while I tolerated the third to a degree. I've seen and loved all the good incarnations of the Turtles and loathed and groaned at the bad ones like Next Mutation. Just so you know that I don't suscribe to that silly theory that a real fan should like every incarnation and I don't believe that theory that those people who don't like this film is because they don't accept change. I accept change very well, and I think people who dislike this film have very valid reasons to do so. That being said, I didn't hate it. I think it has some good moments, but in general it's OK at best, and while it's definitely better than TMNT III, it's still weaker than the other two live-action films and the two animated ones. THE TMNT: TMNT started out as a joke. Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird published a comic book with the intention of parodying 80's comic books, just trying to have a laugh, and never imagined the sensation it was going to be. The comic shows the origin of the TMNT, four turtles get in contact with a mutagenic substance and transform into humanoid creatures, who are then trained in the art of ninjutsu by an also-mutated rat who learned it by watching his owner Hamato Yoshi. They live in the sewer and later meet a human lab assistant named April O' Neill, who becomes their contact in the human world. Eastman and Laird were big Frank Miller fans, and applied his style to the comic book (to the point where, as an easter egg, the Turtles' origin is a direct consequence of Daredevil's). The book wasn't a huge hit at first, but it gained a cult following. But then, the story would be adapted into a saturday morning cartoon, and that rocketed the TMNT into fame and they became a huge pop culture symbol. The cartoon made some changes to the story, like turning April into a reporter, making Splinter actually a transformed Hamato Yoshi rather than his pet and making Shredder a regular villain (he showed up just once in the first issue of the comic, where he was promptly killed). Incidentally, Eastman and Laird weren't fans of the light tone of the cartoon, and were much more pleased with the darker tone of the subsequent live-action film and the 2003 animated series. THE 2014 FILM (original review): This new film makes some changes to the basic formula (none of which are necessary or interesting) and it takes cues from different previous adaptations. For instance, they kept April's job as a reporter and his cameraman Vernon Fenwick from the cartoon, but they kept Splinter as a rat. They also kept the personalities of the turtles better established in the cartoon and the film (such as Raphael's attitude problems). But that's where similarities end. Instead of being an accident, the Turtles are an experiment, and there's no Hamato Yoshi in existence. The foot clan are gun-totting terrorists rather than ninjas or robots and... well, it gets a little complicated. See, the film subscribes to the quite annoying trend of having ridiculous coincidences all the time. Characters meet and it turns out they had met long before. An event happens and it just so happens that it's the exact thing the villain needed to happen for his plan to realize. It reeks of several script rewrites. There's the obvious "Turtles were going to be alien" that was changed, but some are a bit more subtle. For instance, it's pretty clear that character Eric Sachs was supposed to be The Shredder, but they changed that due to backlash, and they split the character in two. In consequence, it feels disjointed. I don't want to spoil things, but there are major problems with the film: the villains' plan is preposterous, the Turtles personalities are exaggerated and the acting is all over the place. William Fitchner is (like Raul Julia in Street Fighter or Jonathan Pryce in G.I. Joe: Retaliation) aware of how ridiculous the plot is, so he has a lot of fun hamming it up, but Megan Fox is impossibly bland and Will Arnett is shamefully wasted. The action is mostly generic and the fight scenes border on the soporific. That being said, the film does have some good moments. There are very few, but some interactions between the Turtles and between them and Splinter are very well done, interesting and actually funny. While I question the reasoning on turning the Turtles into hulking brutes, I'm not one of those who hate their visual design. I actually think it's nice and original, and I like the idea of heroes who are not impossibly attractive. Also, one of the action scenes is actually very well done and it's exciting. The real problem with the film is that it doesn't feel much like a TMNT movie. They could have replaced the turtles with, say, Chip and Dale's Rescue Rangers or the G.I. Joe team and they could have had practically the same plot. They eliminated some of the things that, in every incarnation, made the TMNT unique and just keeping the same name doesn't make them the same. So, it's a complicated thing: I think this movie fails as a TMNT movie, but it does fine as an action film. Yet I can't help to think that people who are not already fans of the Turtles will probably don't like it. It sounds strange, but you have to see the movie to understand. All in all, I think it's still worth watching at least once. But then, depending on your views, you might consider a second watch at some point or you will promptly forget about it. THE 2014 FILM (after rewatch): While my opinion on the film is that it's still a stupid movie, it does improve after rewatching it. Once not constricted by expectations and knowing exactly how the plot is going to unfold, it gets easier to enjoy it for what it is. To be fair, the personalities of the Turtles are well done, and the film is chock full of easter eggs and references to previous iterations of the franchise. It's just a shame that they're wasted in a derivative plot with uninteresting villains. Still, I'd give it half a star more if Amazon allowed it. THE BLU-RAY: Unlike most Blu Rays these days, this one takes you straight to the main menu right after the Paramount logo, not forcing you to watch dozens of sometimes unskippable clips and ads. That's very welcome, since I like to see trailers in theaters, but they annoy me in home video, as they're always for movies I've already seen (for instance, the Guardians of the Galaxy Blu Ray starts with a trailer for The Winter Soldier, a movie that was released in home video months before). The film's video and audio quality are excellent. I've noticed how some new films try to exaggerate a grain effect in their home video releases, who knows for what reason, but luckily this doesn't happen here. The film has quite a few extras, but unfortunately, except for a passing mention of the original comic, none of them talk about previous iterations or adaptations of the franchise. Still, the ones we have are short but interesting. The first, "Digital Reality" is the one talking about giving life to the Turtles and the overall visual design of the film (sets, action scenes, etc.). As usual, it gives a lot of info in those little details that you never notice while watching the film but you'd definitely do if they weren't there. "In Your Face" The Turtles in 3D" details about what goes into making the film in 3D and they do a fair show of claiming why they didn't think of it as just a gimmick (this extra can be seen in 3D, even if you got the regular Blu Ray). "It Ain't Easy Being Green" takes a detailed look at the actors portraying the Turtles and all the job they did to become these characters with motion capture. It's interesting, but it's curious how there's no mention of the voice of Leonardo and Splinter being later replaced with other voice actors. "Evolutionary Mash-Up" is curious. It gives interesting information and compares the evolution of turtles in real life (i.e., the actual animals, not the characters) and the ninjas in real life, myth and culture. It's inequivocably educational, so I find curious its inclusion here, but it's very neat and it does showcase the fact that the filmmakers actually did their job doing research about these characters. "Turtle Rock" is about the film's musical score, and it's a fairly interesting view on the process, which is a bit odd for a film with such a forgettable score. "Extended Ending" is actually a deleted scene that chronollogicaly belongs right before the actual ending, and showcases April working back at Channel 6, which is something the finished film glossed over. Finally, the last two are the "'Shell Shocked' Music Video", which is the rap song from the film's ending, and a "Making of" of that video. The Turtles' adaptations have had a long history with rap music, and this one's no different. "Shell Shocked" is more contemporary rap, though, so it depends on your tastes wheter you'll enjoy it or not (I don't, and I have no shame in admitting I'm partial to "Ninja Rap"). One more thing: this Blu Ray comes with ninja masks as a gift. I understand it's an unexpected free, if cheap, extra (it wasn't there when I made the preorder, it was added later), and maybe I shouldn't complain. I mean, I think their gimmick is counterproductive. Instead of four masks, one for each color, you get two masks, which are reversible, with two colors each. They're OK in their own right, but that reduces the number of simultaneous uses to two instead of four, and not any two (you can't be Donatello and Leonardo at the same time, for instance). I mean, if your kid wants to play with three friends they need to get extra masks somewhere else.
DD Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2022
The cute turtles I grew up with are no longer. They’re giant beefed up roughians now and their language and adventures are no longer for little kids.
Ranasha Gregory Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2022
JW Reviewed in the United States on December 6, 2015
As a huge fan of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, I grew up watching the cartoons, the movies, and I have even read all of the comics done by Kevin Eastman, including the classics, the ultimate collection, and the newest series. I had the toys, the sewer system, the pizza thrower, the turtle van and about 30 different themed turtles including the originals. And when I was very young, my parents took me to Six Flags to watch the "Coming Out of Their Shells Tour" in which I won't go into great detail about. I feel I've read or watched every iteration of the turtle's back story. So as a kid growing up at the time the turtles were at their peak and being a huge fan still at the age of 29, I feel I owe it to myself and to others to do this review. ****Spoiler Alert**** I will probably reveal parts of the movie, comics, and previous movies in my review. The Good: The characters personalities are spot on. I honestly thought that Johnny Knoxville doing Leo's voice would ruin the movie for me, but he did an outstanding job with the voice of Leo in this movie. Donny is still
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