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Comment by Cameron Dacosta on July 18, 2012 at 3:15pm I can't believe I'm admitting this, but I actually enjoyed this. I thought it was a sweet and charming film. Sure, it isn't the best movie I've ever seen, and if I look at this objectively, it sucks, but I thought it was cute and humorous (at times). Gargamel really had me laughing during this film, and they got the actor spot on! However, I thought it went on too long and was overly predictable since it was in New York and the directors had no idea what to do with the Smurfs. I give this movie an EXTREMELY LOW Matinee.
Comment by Richard Dempsey on April 9, 2012 at 8:27am Funny story about that Smurfs episode. Originally the smurfs turned BLACK not purple, but black. It was airred in Europe like that, but here, America banned for obvious reasons.
Here is a snippet of an article from Cracked.com that I found about smurfs:
WHY THE SMURFS ARE ACTUALLY NAZIS
The creator of the Smurfs, Pierre Culliford, aka Peyo, was born in Belgium in 1928, which means that he spent his childhood under Nazi occupation and, according to Bueno, might have consequently reflected the spirit of those times in his later work, whether he was aware of it or not.
We can all agree that a person's early years can have a great influence on his or her later life. It's like how the creator of Mario allegedly based his design on his annoying landlord, except in this case Peyo drew little blue Nazis. It makes sense.
For one, the Smurfs are all united against a common enemy, the sorcerer Gargamel, whose large nose supposedly makes him look like a Jewish stereotype.
Gargamel also has a cat named Azrael -- a name that comes from Jewish mysticism -- and is the creator of Smurfette, who becomes a vision of Aryan beauty after Papa Smurf "fixes" her with magic.
The most damning evidence, however, seems to come from a comic titled "The Black Smurfs," where the Smurfs get infected, via bites, with a mysterious disease that turns them black, mindless and aggressive, which Bueno interpreted as concerns for blood purity. The book would not have appeared in the U.S. to this day if the color of the sickness wasn't eventually changed to purple
Read more: 6 Insane (But Convincing) Theories on Children's Pop Culture | Crac... http://www.cracked.com/article_19673_6-insane-but-convincing-theori...
Comment by Ezequiel Blood on January 6, 2012 at 9:44pm Awesome Review!!!
But where was NPH
animation where
smurfs were "tearing up his ass"???
C'mon would've been funny!
Comment by Tracy on November 3, 2011 at 8:40am
Comment by condemned6436 on October 12, 2011 at 4:01pm
Comment by condemned6436 on October 12, 2011 at 3:52pm
Comment by gina on September 14, 2011 at 4:45am
Comment by jenny on September 3, 2011 at 4:13pm I just watched it, awesome man!
This is a good movie I liked it ,
its available at WWW.FREEMOVIEREPUBLIC.COM
, english, in HQ quality.
Comment by Popcorn Jockey on August 15, 2011 at 1:10pm
Comment by thehinduskakid on August 14, 2011 at 6:08pm © 2013 Created by The Spill Crew.
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