Adapted from the popular Nickelodeon show, this feature continues the adventures of the blithely cheerful, football-headed Arnold (voice by Spencer Klein) on the big screen. When corrupt developer Schek (Paul Sorvino) threatens to buy the run-down urban neighborhood where Arnold lives, he and his best friend Gerald (Jamil Smith) rally the neighbors to keep their homes from being turned into a mega-mall. After their peaceful efforts fail, they turn to espionage in a spoof of Men in Black and other action films. Hey Arnold! suffers from the same difficulty as many theatrical features spawned from TV cartoons: the characters have to solve a problem that’s too big. The James Bond-style gadgetry and car chases don’t fit into the slightly skewed vision of fourth-grade life that made the series popular. The limited animation and awkward designs will work better in the video release. Rated PG for cartoon violence. –Charles Solomon

Price:$9.95

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Play Set Includes Buzz Lightyear, Sheriff Woody, Jessie, Twitch, Trixie, LotsO Huggin Bear, Big Baby, Sparks, Stretch, Chunk, Mr Pricklepants, Peas in a Pod, Buttercup and Dolly. Theyll be no toy left behind with this Deluxe Toy Story 3 Figurine Set. All your favorite characters are here, like Buzz Lightyear and Woody, along with lots of the new ones like Lotso, Twitch and Chunk whos face changes depending on his mood.

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A BUNCH OF ENTERPRISING YOUTHS STAGE A CONCERT TO SAVE THEIRNEIGHBORHOOD FROM THE EVIL INDUSTRIALIST.

Price:$19.98

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Cars Movie Moments:Buzz and Woody

These unique character cars deliver great moments from the Disney/Pixar movie, CARS. Recreate your favorite scenes from the movie, or rev up the fun and make your own adventures. CARS is a journey of speed, of discovering new places and new friends. And in the end it’s not always about where you end up, it’s about how you got there. Includes two character vehicles. Vehicles measure 3.5″L x 1.5″W x 1″H. Character vehicles include Buzz and Woody.

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Digimon - The Movie

Amazon.com

Like the similar Pokémon craze, the animated Digimon TV series has spawned a full-length theatrical film. The two phenomena are similar: kids collect monsters and go on adventures. While Pokémon has a sense of odyssey and a wisp of a moral, Digimon is flat-out rough-and-tumble adventure. Can an adult figure out the digi-details of the digi-world? Here’s a digi-shot. That world is full of evolving monsters that live and fight in their own ways. The digi-world and real world can intermix, and one of the portals is the Internet. So kids sit at their laptops and fight with their digi-monsters in an abstract environment that looks like something from Tron but with none of the cool. The first 50 of 83 minutes is backstory that takes place eight years earlier. So everyone is grown up (as the time frame leaps over all the original Digimon TV shows), and Digimon and humans interact on Earth. A bad digi-virus is bent on revenge, and it will take more than a laptop to (more…)