List of WildBrain programs
Contributors to Wikimedia projects
Article ImagesThis is a list of programs by DHX Media and its predecessors Decode Entertainment, Halifax Film Company, Studio B Productions, Cookie Jar Entertainment, DIC Entertainment, FilmFair, and Cinar.
Note that some shows were co-productions with other companies and may and/or not necessarily be owned by DHX Media.
Animated series
FilmFair (UK)
- The Herbs (1968)
- Hattytown Tales (1969, 1980)
- The Adventures of Parsley (1970)
- The Wombles (1973–1975, 1996–1997 and 2015-present)
- Paddington (1975–1986)
- Simon in the Land of Chalk Drawings (1976)
- The Perishers (1979)
- Moschops (1983)
- The Adventures of Portland Bill (1983)
- The Blunders (1986)
- Edward and Friends (1987)
- The Shoe People (1987)
- Windfalls (1988)
- Bangers and Mash (1988–1989)
- Huxley Pig (1989–1990)
- Nellie the Elephant (1989–1990)
- The Dreamstone (1990–1995) (Series 1 and 2 only)
- Rod 'n' Emu (1991)
- Astro Farm (1992–1997)
- The Gingerbread Man (1992)
- Upstairs Downstairs Bears (2001–2002)
Decode Entertainment
- Freaky Stories (1997-2000) (co-production with Sound Venture Productions, Funbag Animation Studios, and Vujade Entertainment)
- Angela Anaconda (1999) (co-production with C.O.R.E.)
- Watership Down (1999-2001) (co-production with Alltime Entertainment)
- Rainbow Fish (2000)
- Undergrads (2001)
- Girlstuff/Boystuff (2002-2005)
- The Blobheads (2003)
- King (2003-2005)
- Olliver's Adventures (2003)
- The Save-Ums (2003-2006)
- Bromwell High (2005) (co-production with Hat Trick Productions)
- Delilah and Julius (2005-2008) (co-production with Collideascope Digital Productions)
- Planet Sketch (2005) (co-production with Aardman Animations)
- Super Why! (2007–present) (co-production with Out of the Blue Enterprises)
- Clang Invasion (2007)
- Urban Vermin (2007-2008) (co-production with YTV)
- Chop Socky Chooks (2008) (co-production with Aardman Animations)
- The Mighty Jungle (2008) (co-production with Halifax Film)
- Dirtgirlworld (2009-2011) (co-production with Mememe Productions)
- Poppet's Town (2009)
- Waybuloo (2009)
- Dudson's Modern Tales
- Naughty Naughty Pets (2011)
Halifax Film
- Poko (2003-2006)
- Franny's Feet (2004-2011)
- Lunar Jim (2005-2012)
- Animal Mechanicals (2007)
- Bo on the Go! (2006-2008)
- The Mighty Jungle (2008) (co-production with Decode Entertainment)
- Pirates: Adventures in Art (2010-)
Studio B Productions/DHX Media Vancouver
- Yvon of the Yukon (1999-2005) (co-production with Corus Entertainment)
- D'Myna Leagues (2000-2002)
- What About Mimi? (2000-2003)
- Yakkity Yak (2002-2003) (co-production with Kapow Pictures and Nickelodeon Productions)
- Being Ian (2005-2007) (co-production with Nelvana)
- Class of the Titans (2005-2008)
- The Amazing Adrenalini Brothers (2006-2007)
- Pucca (2006-2008)
- George of the Jungle (2007-2008, 2014-present) (co-production with DreamWorks Classics)
- Ricky Sprocket: Showbiz Boy (2007-2009) (co-production with Bejuba Entertainment and SnowdenFine Animation)
- Martha Speaks (2008–present) (co-production with WGBH)
- Kid vs. Kat (2009-2011)
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (2010–present) (co-production with Hasbro Studios and Top Draw Animation)
- Pound Puppies (2010–present) (First 7 episodes were produced by 9 Story Entertainment) (co-production with Hasbro Studios and Paul & Joe Productions (season 1))
- Littlest Pet Shop (2012–present) (co-production with Hasbro Studios)
- Johnny Test (2013-present) (Season 6-present) (Season 1 was produced by Warner Bros. Animation and Season 2-5 were produced by Cookie Jar)
Ragdoll Productions
- The Adventures of Abney & Teal [1]
- Brum [2]
- Dipdap [3]
- Blips [4]
- Boohbah [5]
- Rosie and Jim [6]
- Tots TV [7]
- Tronji [8]
- Teletubbies [9]
- Teletubbies Everywhere [10]
- In the Night Garden [11]
DIC
- Cro et Bronto (1980; Co-Production with Southern Television And Westward Television)
- Archibald le Magi-chien (1980; Co-Production with Channel Television)
- Ulysses 31 (1981; Co-Produced By Associated TeleVision)[12]
- The Mysterious Cities of Gold (1982; does not own rights) (co-production with M.K. and Studio Pierrot)
- Inspector Gadget (1983–1986) (co-production with LBS Communications and Television South)ref name=animationinsider />
- The Littles (1983–1986) (co-production with ABC)[13]
- Kideo TV (1984; Co-Production With Tyne Tees Television)
- The Get Along Gang (1984) (Pilot episode was produced by Nelvana; co-production with American Greetings)[12]
- Wolf Rock TV (1984) (co-production with Dick Clark Productions)[12]
- Kidd Video (1984–1985) (co-production with Saban Entertainment and Tyne Tees Television)
- Pole Position (1984–1985)[12]
- Heathcliff and the Catillac Cats (1984–1988) (co-production with LBS Communications and Cuckoo's Nest Studio)[12]
- Rainbow Brite (1984–1986) (co-production with Hallmark Cards, Early Version Produced By Quinn Martin Productions)[12]
- The Care Bears (1985) (co-production with American Greetings and Nelvana; later episodes were exclusively produced by Nelvana with American Greetings)[12]
- Hulk Hogan's Rock 'n' Wrestling (1985) (co-production with WWE)
- Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors (1985) (co-produced by SFM Entertainment and London Weekend Television)[12]
- Derrou (1985-1987)
- M.A.S.K. (1985–1986) (co-production LBS Communications)[12]
- Kissyfur (1986) (co-produced by NBC)
- Little Clowns of Happytown (1986) (acquired from ABC Entertainment in 2000, co-production with Marvel Productions)[12]
- Popples (1986–1988) (co-production with American Greetings)[12]
- Dennis the Menace (1986–1988)[14] (co-production with The Program Exchange and General Mills; Atkinson Film-Arts co-produced Season 2)
- The Real Ghostbusters (1986–1991) (Produced in association with Columbia Pictures Television)
- Lady Lovely Locks (1987) (co-production with American Greetings)[12]
- The Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin (1987) (co-production with Atkinson Film-Arts)
- Beverly Hills Teens (1987)[13]
- Dinosaucers (1987–1988) (co-production with Coca-Cola Telecommunications and Thames Television, distributed by Sony Pictures Television)
- Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theater (1987–1988) (co-production with Sanrio and MGM Television)
- The New Archies (1987–1988) (co-production with Archie Comics and Saban Entertainment)[12]
- Starcom: The U.S. Space Force (1987–1988)[12]
- Sylvanian Families (1987–1988)[12]
- Derrou Juniors (1988)
- Beany and Cecil (1988) (co-produced with Bob Clampett Productions)
- ALF: The Animated Series (1988–1989) (co-production with Alien Productions and Saban Entertainment)[14]
- C.O.P.S. (1988–1989) (co-production with Claster Television)[12]
- ALF Tales (1988–1990) (co-production with Alien Productions and Saban Entertainment)
- The Chipmunks (1988–1991) (previous episodes were produced by Ruby-Spears; some episodes were produced by Murakami-Wolf-Swenson; co-production with Bagdasarian Productions)[14]
- Ring Raiders (1989) (co-production with Those Characters from Cleveland)
- The Karate Kid (produced in association with Columbia Pictures Television) (1989–1990)
- Camp Candy (1989–1992) (co-production with Saban Entertainment)
- Maxie's World (1989) (co-production with Claster Television)[12]
- The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! (1989–1990) (co-production with Nintendo of America, Viacom And Television South)[14]
- The Legend of Zelda (as part of The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!) (1989–1990) (co-production with Nintendo of America, Viacom And Television South)[14]
- Captain N: The Game Master (1989–1992) (co-production with Nintendo of America and Granada Television )[12]
- G.I. Joe (1989–1992) (previous episodes were produced by Sunbow and Marvel; co-production with Claster Television)[14]
- King Koopa's Kool Kartoons (1989-1990)
- Power Team (as part of Video Power) (1990–1992) (produced by Acclaim Entertainment and Saban Entertainment)
- The Wizard of Oz (1990) (co-production with Turner Entertainment)
- Captain N & The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 (1990–1991) (co-production with Nintendo of America)[12]
- Captain Planet and the Planeteers (1990–1993) (later episodes were produced by Hanna-Barbera; co-production with TBS and Turner Entertainment, distributed by Warner Bros. Television)[14]
- New Kids on the Block (1990–1991)
- Captain Zed and the Zee Zone (1991) (co-production with Collingwood O'Hare and Scottish Television, distributed by HIT Entertainment)
- Swamp Thing (1991)[12]
- Hammerman (1991–1992)
- Captain N & Super Mario World (1991–1992) (co-production with Nintendo of America[12] & Pacific Rim Productions)
- Where's Waldo? (1991–1992) (distributed by HIT Entertainment)[14]
- Wish Kid (1991–1992)[12]
- ProStars (1991–1992)[13]
- Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventures (second season; first season produced by Hanna-Barbera; co-production with Orion Pictures) (1991)
- Super Dave: Daredevil for Hire (1992)[13]
- Stunt Dawgs (1992–1993) (co-production with Rainforest Entertainment and Franklin Waterman Productions)
- Wild West C.O.W.-Boys of Moo Mesa (1992–1994) (Acquired from ABC Entertainment, produced by Greengrass Productions, King World Productions, Gunther-Wahl Productions (Season 1), Ruby-Spears Productions (Season 2), and ABC Entertainment (Season 3))
- The Incredible Dennis the Menace (1993)
- Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog (1993-1996) (co-production with Sega Corporation North America and Bohbot Communications)[14]
- Sonic the Hedgehog (1993–1994) (co-production with Sega of America)[12]
- Madeline (1993–1994)[14]
- Hurricanes (1993–1997) (co-production with Scottish Television and Siriol Productions, distributed by Bohbot Productions)[13]
- Street Sharks (1994–1995) (distributed by Bohbot Productions)[12]
- Where on Earth Is Carmen Sandiego? (1994–1995) (distributed by The Program Exchange)[14]
- Bump in the Night (1994–1996, Acquired from ABC Entertainment; produced by Danger Productions and Greengrass Productions)[13]
- Ultraforce (1995)
- Action Man (1995–1996) (not to be confused with the series produced by Mainframe Entertainment produced by YTV and Saban Entertainment)[12]
- Gadget Boy & Heather (1995–1996) (co-production with France Animation and M6)[13]
- What-a-Mess (1995–1996)[13]
- The New Adventures of Madeline (1995–1996)[14]
- Sailor Moon (first 82 episodes; later episodes were dubbed by Cloverway) (1995–1998)[14]
- The Legend of Sarmoti: Siegfried & Roy (1996)[12]
- Inspector Gadget's Field Trip (1996–1998)(Co-Production With Border Television[12]
- Gadget Boy's Adventures in History (1997) (co-production with France Animation and M6)[13]
- Mummies Alive! (1997) (produced by Claster Television, Inc.)[13]
- The Wacky World of Tex Avery (1997) (produced by Les Studios Tex, Telecima and M6)[13]
- Extreme Dinosaurs (1997–1999) (co-production with Bohbot Kids Network)
- Pocket Dragon Adventures (1998) (co-production with Bohbot Kids Network)
- Sonic Underground (1999–2000) (co-production with Sega of America, Les Studios Tex, TF1, Bohbot Kids Network And Anglia Television)[13]
- Sabrina: The Animated Series (1999–2000) (co-production with Savage Studios Ltd., Hartbreak Films and Archie Comics)[14]
- Archie's Weird Mysteries (1999–2000) (co-produced by Les Studios Tex and Archie Comics)[12]
- Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century (1999–2001) (co-production with Scottish Television)[12]
- Mary-Kate and Ashley in Action! (2001) (produced by Dualstar Animation)[12]
- Alienators: Evolution Continues (2001–2002) (co-produced by The Montecito Picture Company, Columbia TriStar Television and DreamWorks Television)[12]
- Gadget and the Gadgetinis (2001–2002) (co-produced with SIP Animation and Saban Entertainment)
- Speed Racer X (2002)
- Liberty's Kids (2002–2003) PBS[13]
- Stargate Infinity (2002–2003) (co-production with MGM Television)[12]
- Super Duper Sumos (2002–2003) (co-produced by Les Studios Tex)[13]
- Sabrina's Secret Life (2003–2004) (co-produced by Les Studios Tex and Archie Comics)[12]
- Knights of the Zodiac (2003–2005) (co-produced with Toei Animation and ADV Films)[12]
- Strawberry Shortcake (2003–2008) (co-production with American Greetings)[13]
- Trollz (2005) (co-production with Studio DAM)[13]
- Horseland (2006–2008)[13]
- Care Bears: Adventures in Care-a-lot (2007–2008) (co-production with American Greetings and SD Entertainment)
- DinoSquad (2007–2008)[13]
- Sushi Pack (2007–2009) (co-production with American Greetings, season 2 had Cookie Jar Entertainment instead of DIC Entertainment)[12]
CINAR
- The Adventures of Paddington Bear (1997–2000) (co-produced with Protecrea)
- Adventures of the Little Koala (1987–1993) (co-produced by Viacom, Television South(1987-December 31, 1992) and Meridian Television(1993)
- Albert the Fifth Musketeer (1993) (co-produced by BBC and France Animation)
- Animal Crackers (1997-1999) (co-produced by Alphanim)
- Are You Afraid of the Dark? (1992-1999) (co-produced by YTV and Nickelodeon)
- Arthur (1996–present) (co-produced by WGBH)
- The Babaloos
- The Baskervilles (1999–2001) (co-produced by Alphanim)
- Bizby (1999)
- A Bunch of Munsch (1992)
- The Busy World of Richard Scarry (1993–1996) (co-produced by Paramount Television)
- Caillou (1997–present) (co-produced by PBS)
- Cat Tales (1994–1996)
- Chip and Charlie (1992)
- C.L.Y.D.E. (1991) (co-produced by France Animation and Central Independent Television)
- The Country Mouse and the City Mouse Adventures (1997–1999) (co-production with WIC Entertainment and France Animation)
- Creepschool (2003) (co-produced by Alphanim)
- Dr. Xargle (1991)
- Flight Squad (1999)
- Journey to the West – Legends of the Monkey King (1999) (co-production with China Central Television)
- The Legend of White Fang (1992-1994) (co-produced by France Animation)
- The Little Lulu Show (1995–1999)
- A Miss Mallard Mystery
- Mona the Vampire (1999–2003) (co-produced by Alphanim, ABC For Kids and Treehouse TV)
- Night Hood (1996)
- Papa Beaver's Storytime (1993–1994)
- Patrol 03 (co-produced by France Animation)
- Plumo (co-produced by Radio-Canada, Kids CBC and TFO)
- Potatoes and Dragons (co-produced by Alphanim)
- The Real Story of... (1990-1992) (co-produced by France Animation)
- Ripley's Believe It or Not! (co-produced by Alphanim)
- Ronin Warriors (Distribution Only)
- Robinson Sucroe (co-produced by France Animation, BBC and Ravensburger)
- Ronin Warriors (co-produced by Graz Entertainment)
- Rumble & Growl
- Simon in the Land of Chalk Drawings (2001)
- Space Cases (1997–1998)
- The Smoggies (1988)
- Treasure (2000) (co-produced by BBC)
- The Twins (2000)
- Upstairs Downstairs Bears (2000-2002) (co-produced by Scottish Television, FilmFair and Egmont Imagination)
- The Wombles (1996–1998) (with United-Productions, FilmFair and HTV Cymru Wales)
- Who Gets the House?
- The Whole of the Moon
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1987)
- The World of David the Gnome (1985-2006) (co-produced by The Weinstein Company, BRB Internacional and Miramax Films, United States & Canada distribution only)
- Young Robin Hood (1991-1992) (co-produced by Hanna-Barbera)
- Zoboomafoo (1999–2001) (co-production with Earth Creatures and Maryland Public Television)
Cookie Jar
- Bronco Teddy (2007)
- Busytown Mysteries (2007–present) (also known as "Hurray for Huckie!")
- Creepschool (co-produced by Alphanim)
- Gerald McBoing-Boing (2005–2007) (co-produced by Teletoon, Classic Media and Ulster Television)
- Ivanhoe: The King's Knight
- Johnny Test (2006–present) (co-produced by Teletoon; Season 1 was produced by Warner Bros. Animation and HTV West)
- Kung Fu Dino Posse (2009) (co-produced with Sunwoo Korea Entertainment Inc., Sunwoo Asia-Pacific Pte Ltd., and Optix Entertainment GmbH)
- Magi Nation (2007–2008)
- MetaJets (co-produced by Sunwoo)
- Mudpit (2011)
- Mumble Bumble
- Nanoboy (distribution only in Canada)
- Noonbory and the Super Seven (2009–present)
- Spider Riders (2006–2007) (co-produced by Bee Train)
- Will and Dewitt (2007–2008)
- World of Quest (2008–2009)
- Postcards from Buster (Arthur spinoff) (2004–2008) (co-production with Marc Brown Studios and WGBH Educational Foundation)
DHX Media
- Rastamouse (2011–present) (co-production with Sony Pictures Television International)
- Shezow (2012–present) (co-production with Kickstart Productions and Moody Street Kids)
- Ella the Elephant (2013–present) (co-production with FremantleMedia Enterprises)
- Packages from Planet X (2013-present (co-production with American Greetings and Disney XD)
- The Wombles (2015-present) (co-production with Dramatico Entertainment)
- Patrol 3
Specials
DIC
- The Adventures of Ronald McDonald: McTreasure Island (1989) (co-production with McDonald's Corporation, Hi-Tops Video and Christopher Brough Productions)
- Barbie and the Rockers: Out of this World (1987) (co-production with Saban Entertainment and Mattel)
- Barbie and The Sensations: Rockin' Back to Earth (1987) (co-production with Saban Entertainment and Mattel)
- Battletoads (1992)
- Defenders of Dynatron City (1992)[12]
- A Hollywood Hounds Christmas (1994)
- Hulk Hogan: All-Time Champ (1992)
- Inspector Gadget Saves Christmas (1992) (co-production with LBS Communications)
- Jingle Bell Rock (1995)
- Legend of the Hawaiian Slammers (1994)[12]
- Little Golden Book Land (1989) (co-production with Western Publishing)
- Madeline (co-production with Cinar and France Animation) (1988)
- Madeline's Christmas (1990)
- Madeline's Rescue (1991)
- Madeline and the Bad Hat (1991)
- Madeline and the Gypsies (1991)
- Madeline in London (1991)
- Meet Julie (1987)
- Poochie (1984)
- Robotman & Friends (1985) (co-production with United Media Productions and LBS Communications)
- Sonic Christmas Blast (1996) (co-production with Sega of America)
- 'Twas the Night Before Bumpy (1996) (co-production with Danger Productions and Buena Vista Television)
Cookie Jar
(also includes productions by CINAR and Filmfair Television)
- Arthur's Perfect Christmas (co-produced by WGBH Educational Foundation) (2000)
- Arthur, It's Only Rock and Roll (co-produced by WGBH Educational Foundation) (2002)
- The Sleep Room (two part miniseries; 1998) (co-produced by Alpha Media)
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (compilation films based on 1986 anime)
Live-action series
Decode Entertainment
- The Zack Files (2000-2002)
- Be the Creature (2003-2004)
- Radio Free Roscoe (2003)
- The Adrenaline Project (2007-2008) (co-production with Yorkshire Television)
- The Latest Buzz (2007-2010)
- Grandpa in My Pocket (2009–present)
- How to Be Indie (2009-2011) (co-production with Heroic Film Company and Yorkshire Television)
- That's So Weird (2009–present)
Halifax Film
- This Hour Has 22 Minutes (2005–present)
- North/South (2006)
- The Guard (2008-2009)
DiC
- Cake (2006) (produced in association with Brookwell McNamara Entertainment)[13]
- Dance Revolution (2006–2007) (produced in association with Brookwell McNamara Entertainment)
- Hey Vern, It's Ernest! (1988–1989) (co-produced by Emshell Producers Group, Inc.)[13]
- Rimba's Island (1994–1996)
- I'm Telling! (1987–1988) (co-production with Saban Entertainment)
- Old MacDonald's Sing-A-Long Farm (1994-1996)
- Pepe Plata (co-production with Univision Communications) (1990)[13]
- Photon (1984) (co-produced by SFM Entertainment and London Weekend Television )[12]
- Record Breakers (1989)[15]
- Superhuman Samurai Syber-Squad (1994–1995) (co-produced by Tsuburaya, Ultracom and All-American Television)[13]
- Tattooed Teenage Alien Fighters from Beverly Hills (1994–1995) (co-production with USA Network)[13]
- Video Power (1990–1992) (produced by Acclaim Entertainment and Saban Entertainment)
- Zak Tales (1990–1991) (co-production with Sesame Workshop, originally The Children's Television Workshop)[12]
- Zoobilee Zoo (1986) (co-production with Hallmark Cards, BRB Productions, London Weekend Television and SFM Entertainment)
Cookie Jar
(also includes productions from CINAR, the company's former incarnation)
- Debra! (2011–present)
- Are You Afraid of the Dark? (1992–1996) (co-production with Nickelodeon, Campfire Productions and YTV)
- Bonjour Timothy
- Dark Oracle (2004–2006)
- The Doodlebops (2004–2009)
- Emily of New Moon (1998–2000) (co-production with WIC Entertainment and Salter Street Films)
- Happy Castle
- The Intrepids (1993–1996)
- Lassie (1997–1999) (co-produced by Classic Media and PolyGram Filmed Entertainment)
- The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo (1996–1998) (co-production with Nickelodeon)
- Sci-Squad
- Space Cases (1996–1997)
- Un Hiver de Tourmente
- Wimzie's House (1995–1996)
- Zoboomafoo (1999–2001) (co-production with Maryland Public Television)
Films
DHX Media
- My Little Pony: Equestria Girls (2013)[16] (co-production with Hasbro Studios)
- Paddington (2014) (co-production with Heyday Films])
DIC
- Here Come the Littles (1985) (co-production with ABC Motion Pictures and Clubhouse Pictures[12])
- Rainbow Brite and the Star Stealer (1985) (co-production with Warner Bros. Pictures)
- Heathcliff: The Movie (1986) (co-production with LBS Communications)
- The Kingdom Chums: Little David's Adventure (1986) (co-production with Diana Kerew Productions)
- Liberty and the Littles (1986) (co-production with ABC; later aired as multi-part TV episode)
- Dennis the Menace: Memory Mayhem (1987)
- Dennis the Menace: The Mitchell's Move (1987)
- Dennis the Menace: Dennis the Movie Star (1988)
- M.A.S.K.: The Movie (1988) (co-production with LBS Communications, UK video only)
- M.A.S.K.: The Movie II (1990) (co-production with LBS Communications, UK video only)
- The Secret Garden (Acquired from ABC Entertainment; produced by Mike Young Productions, Greengrass Productions, and ABC Entertainment)
- Sailor Moon R: The Promise of the Rose
- Sailor Moon S: Hearts on Ice
- Sailor Moon SuperS: Black Dream Hole
- Madeline: Lost in Paris (1999) Co-Produced by Meridian Television
- Inspector Gadget: Gadget's Greatest Gadgets (1999)
- Sunday Movie Toons series (2002–2003)
- Sabrina: Friends Forever (based on Sabrina: The Animated Series and Sabrina's Secret Life)
- Inspector Gadget's Last Case
- Time Kid (based on The Time Machine by H. G. Wells)
- Dennis the Menace: Cruise Control (based on the series characters Dennis The Menace)
- The Archies in: Jugman (based on Archie's Weird Mysteries)
- Dinosaur Island (based on The Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)
- My Fair Madeline
- Groove Squad
- Treasure Island
- Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol
- Globehunters: An Around the World in 80 Days Adventure
- The Amazing Zorro
- 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
- Strawberry Shortcake: The Sweet Dreams Movie (co-produced by American Greetings)[14]
Cookie Jar
(also includes productions from CINAR, the company's former incarnation)
- Hockey Night (1984)
- John the Fearless (1984)
- Million Dollar Babies (1994)
- The Best Bad Thing (1997)
- Ghost of Dickens' Past (1998)
- Sally Marshall Is Not an Alien (1999)
- Both Sides of the Law (1999)
- Who Gets the House? (1999)
- Kayla (1999)
- Ivor the Invisible (2001)
- Heart: The Marilyn Bell Story (2001)
- Johnny Test: The Movie (TBA, 2013)[17]
References
- ^ http://www.toyworldmag.co.uk/news/2013/09/dhx-media-acquires-ragdoll-worldwide
- ^ http://www.toyworldmag.co.uk/news/2013/09/dhx-media-acquires-ragdoll-worldwide
- ^ http://www.toyworldmag.co.uk/news/2013/09/dhx-media-acquires-ragdoll-worldwide
- ^ http://www.toyworldmag.co.uk/news/2013/09/dhx-media-acquires-ragdoll-worldwide
- ^ http://www.toyworldmag.co.uk/news/2013/09/dhx-media-acquires-ragdoll-worldwide
- ^ http://www.toyworldmag.co.uk/news/2013/09/dhx-media-acquires-ragdoll-worldwide
- ^ http://www.toyworldmag.co.uk/news/2013/09/dhx-media-acquires-ragdoll-worldwide
- ^ http://www.toyworldmag.co.uk/news/2013/09/dhx-media-acquires-ragdoll-worldwide
- ^ http://www.theguardian.com/media/2013/sep/16/teletubbies-owner-bought-canadian-dhx-media
- ^ http://www.theguardian.com/media/2013/sep/16/teletubbies-owner-bought-canadian-dhx-media
- ^ http://www.theguardian.com/media/2013/sep/16/teletubbies-owner-bought-canadian-dhx-media
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an "Full Catalog of Shows". Retrieved 2007-11-30.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Kyle Luna (2008-02-14). "DIC Entertainment Launches KEWLCartoons.com". Animation Insider. Retrieved 2008-02-25.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "The animated life of DIC". Variety. 2006-10-06. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
- ^ DiC Shows
- ^ Schmidt, Gregory (12 May 2013). "Equestria Girls, a My Little Pony Offshoot, in Its Movie Debut". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
- ^ COOKIE JAR ENTERTAINMENT FEATURES NEW SEASON OF JOHNNY TEST, MUDPIT, AND TOP PERFORMING LIBRARY TITLES AT MIPTV