Released in 1975, Rikki-Tikki-Tavi was an animated television special directed by legendary animator Chuck Jones and based on the classic story by Rudyard Kipling.
The story follows a brave mongoose who takes on two deadly cobras to protect the family that rescued him. For a generation of kids, it was one of those rare animated films that felt genuinely intense. The stakes were real, the villains were terrifying, and you couldn't help but root for Rikki-Tikki every step of the way.
More than 50 years later, it's still remembered as one of the finest animated adaptations ever put on television.
Did you watch Rikki-Tikki-Tavi growing up?
Exclusive clip from ‘I AM FRANKELDA’, the first-ever stop-motion film made in Mexico.
The film follows a writer who is taken to another realm to help write nightmares to keep monsters alive.
Releasing tomorrow on Netflix.
We don't talk about Otacon's grief enough
We spend the Plant segment from Raiden's pov so it's easy to forget the only reason Snake & Otacon were there too is to rescue Emma & imagine how crushing it was for Hal just for her to die in his arms without ever leaving Big Shell
genuine question, why does a train line or a new park have to go thru years of votes and environmental impact studies but something like this can just? happen?