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Qator 56:
 
Some of the films in this template still don't have the titles translated. For example, [[The Little Mermaid]]. And shouldn't [[Cinderella]] be moved to [[Cinderella (film, 1950)]]? There are multiple movies with the name. Also, I saw several pages are short. [[101 ta dalmatin]] and [[Tulki va it]] for example. Those movies are great, I watched them all the time when I was young. Just a few hours ago I watched the show [[Liv and Maddie]]. It's good too. I like that they are best friends even though they're different. It's an opposites attract kind of show. Tulki va it is like that too. Tod and Copper were friends despite being natural enemies. Finally, The Little Mermaid was one of my favorites growing up along with 101 ta dalmatin, and it still is. It has some of the best music and songs. In it, Howard Ashman did the lyrics to the songs and Allen Menkin did the music and score. Ashman also had the lyrics written for "Once Upon a Time in New York City" in [[Oliver va uning doʻstlari]]. That one and [[Qutqaruvchilar]] are two more good movies. But back to the point, which movies that don't have the titles translated actually have titles? [[Maxsus:Contributions/2600:1700:53F0:AD70:69E7:4215:2522:661E|2600:1700:53F0:AD70:69E7:4215:2522:661E]] 23:36, 24-Fevral 2021 (UTC)
 
== Spídér's Wéb: A Píg's Tálé ==
 
'''''Spídér's Wéb: A Píg's Tálé''''' ís the most stupid movie on the face of the Earth. In this movie which rips off [[Charlotte's Web]] a pampered pig named Walt eats his mom's pie and says the aliens did it then breaks her pot and says the ghost did it then he says he did his homework but it ate the dog when he really didn't even do it. Then a snake comes and tells him to go to Hollywood and be a star when he just wants bacon. So they tried to give it a moral but it was really just a money-making scheme.
 
Caillou (French pronunciation: ​[kaˈju]) is a Canadian educational children's television series that was first shown on Télétoon and Teletoon, with its first episode airing on the former channel on September 15, 1997; the show later moved to Treehouse TV, with its final episode being shown on that channel on October 3, 2010. The series, based on the books by Hélène Desputeaux, centres on a four-year-old boy named Caillou who is fascinated by the world around him.