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Browse - Most popular stop-motion shows
Robot Chicken
Robot Chicken is a stop-motion animated series created by Seth Green and Matthew Senreich. It airs on Adult Swim and features hilarious sketches and parodies.
The show uses action figures and toys to bring pop culture references to life. With a talented voice cast and clever writing, Robot Chicken is a must-watch for comedy fans.
SuperMansion
A group of elderly superheroes, the League of Freedom, were once renowned throughout the world. Now under the leadership of Titanium Rex, they attempt to stay relevant in a world that has passed them by.
Moral Orel
Moral Orel is an animated show on Cartoon Network's "Adult Swim" segment, which centers around the life of Orel Puppington, a young boy who consistently fails in his attempts to understand and abide by Protestant Christian values.
Celebrity Deathmatch
Sport and event coverage re-defined! Today's hottest celebrities are pitted against each other in no-holds-barred fantasy fights complete with pre- and post-battle activities, one-on-one interviews, press conferences and behind-the-scenes locker room moments that parody the worlds of film, television, music and politics.
Mary Shelley's Frankenhole
In this stop-motion series, we follow Victor Frankenstein, the mad genius who mastered immortality and now has also created an infinite number of portals (or Frankenholes) connecting his small, Eastern European village (that is teaming with monsters and supernatural forces) to every time period from the past and the future.
Titan Maximum
Created by Tom Root and Matthew Senreich, Titan Maximum is a parody on the various Super Robot shows. Robot Chicken's creator - Seth Green - also lends his voice to this similar stop-motion animation show about a squadron of young pilots whose spaceships combine to form the giant robot Titan Maximum.
Wallace and Gromit's Cracking Contraptions
A series of ten Wallace and Gromit stop motion animations varying in length from 1 to 3 minutes. Each episode features one of Wallace's new inventions and Gromit's skeptical reaction to it. The series was produced and released in 2002 by Aardman Animations.
The PJs
Thurgood Stubbs is the chief superintendent in a housing project, living with his wife, Murief. The show, which was created by Eddie Murphy, follows the adventures of the Stubbs family and others in the building, animated through the process of 'foamation.'
Creature Comforts
The makers of "Wallace & Gromit" bring you this collection of animated film shorts, which takes audio interviews of people on the street and uses them as voice tracks for stop-motion animals.
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