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He’s the star of a series packed with fist-pump inducing stunts, explosions and pulverizing action. An average Joe with a heart of gold to go with his ever-reliable martial arts skills, The Smurfs is a curling, adapting and dancing cartoon phenomenon released in the 1970s. In the years since its first release, the iconic blue creatures found themselves far beyond the clouds, and now, over 35 years later, the animated fantasy franchise is showing no signs of slowing down. What better way to celebrate than to relive your childhood memories? The Smurfs: A Nintendo 3DS game will see the Smurfs return to the digital world in May and early access to the demo is already available on pre-order. The game is scheduled to release in the US on June 29 and in the UK on June 8. Whether it be fast talking, running and jumping all in one or being able to tell the hero from the zany villian, the land of the smurfs is packed with tricks to entertain all ages, so grab your magic wands and prepare to go to the town in the clouds. How do you feel about a Smurf movie? If you have any, don’t forget to share your thoughts with us below.
The film began its life as a much-maligned work by Andrey Lazarev, which went off the rails, ending up as a bloated, excessively long piece of propaganda that repeated the absurdist nonsense of his previous debut, the original Russian Civilization. Lazarev demonstrated absolutely nothing about the history of Russian civilization. All you saw in Civilization: Colonization was a series of crude, often absurd, and often unclear primary source passages (mostly extracts from Russian and Polish travelogues) strung into pseudo-historical arguments about the origins of agriculture, trade, and military technology, relentlessly equating the "technological progress" of the Russian state during the reign of Peter the Great with the reason for its success. d2c66b5586