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List Price: $14.98 Your Price: $13.49 You Save: $1.49 (10%)Prices subject to change. Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: DVD Brand: Unknown EAN: 0092388070195 Format: Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Label: Consumervision Manufacturer: Consumervision Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Consumervision Release Date: September 17, 2007 Running Time: 20 minutes Studio: Consumervision Theatrical Release Date: 2007 Editorial Review: Description: Catchy songs, silly stories and fun, interactive-games are guaranteed to inform, inspire and motivate tiny toddlers to use the potty. Along the way, appropriate toilet skills are modeled for the viewer. Join Paige & Parker Panda and a gaggle of other lovable animated characters as they show kids what they need to know to go potty all by themselves. Related Items: Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - Wonderful Addition to Potty Training!My son started potty training very early, but then became uninterested and wouldn't use the potty again for a couple of months. I recently purchased this video for him. HE LOVES, LOVES, LOVES IT! He remembered the songs quickly and within a couple of days of watching it he started wanting to pee pee in the potty like the Potty Pandas! He is now well on his way to being trained and I know this video had a lot to do with it! We are keeping this one for baby #2 (on the way) and will recommend it to our friends. Rating: - Awesome DVDThis is the best potty dvd i've seen so far for kids.My 1 1/2 yr old started using the potty after looking at Go Potty Go !!!!!!!! I recommended it too several of my friends. Rating: - Great movie, not annoyingI bought this DVD for my 17 month old daughter, but I'm not sure who likes it more, her or my 4 year old boy!! They both love the songs (I even find myself singing them around the house) and they ask to watch it again and again. I'm not positive how much influence it's had in our potty training (we've only been at it for a few weeks) but it's definately entertaining and sends an excellent message. Rating: - Go Potty Go!Was a cute video but sang more than they showed how to actually use the potty... Rating: - Best Potty EntertainmentMy daughter can't stop watching this video. She dances and chants "Potty Go" constantly. She's also started using the potty! |

In the previous The Curse of the Black Pearl, Sparrow was killed--sent to Davy Jones' Locker. In the opening scenes, the viewer sees that death has not been kind to Sparrow--but that's not to say he hasn't found endless ways to amuse himself, cavorting with dozens of hallucinated versions of himself on the deck of the Black Pearl. But Sparrow is needed in this world, so a daring rescue brings him back. Keith Richards' much ballyhooed appearance as Jack's dad is little more than a cameo, though he does play a wistful guitar. But the action, as always, is more than satisfying, held together by Depp, who, outsmarting the far-better-armed British yet again, causes a bewigged commander to muse: "Do you think he plans it all out, or just makes it up as he goes along?" As far as fans are concerned, it matters not. --A.T. Hurley
On the DVD
Here's something you can't say about just any DVD extras: There appears to be more of Keith Richards in the outtakes, interviews, and other special features on the At World's End disc than in the actual film. For those scenes alone, this special edition is well worth the price. Richards looks as woozy and gamey as all the rumors suggested, and answers questions he's not asked, with Johnny Depp sitting next to him, almost acting as a translator. Richards offers pithy comments like, "Everything I do is original, you better believe," and smiles when other cast members call him "Two-Take Richards" for supposedly nailing his scenes.
The packed second disc also includes a terrific mini-doc on how the filmmakers created the famous maelstrom, in an enormous hanger in Palmdale, California, with the ships floating 30 feet off the ground. "Just moving the Black Pearl was an enormous undertaking," says producer Jerry Bruckheimer with serious understatement. Other cool extras include "Tale of the Many Jacks," deleted scenes with great commentary, "The World of Chow Yun-Fat," a bio of composer Hans Zimmer, features on the set designers, a look at the impressive Brethren Court, and some hilarious bloopers. "You can't curse in a Disney film," deadpans Depp when a costar blurts out something blue. "See? I told him." The extras are truly as much of a rollicking adventure as the film. --A.T. Hurley
Beyond Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End
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In the previous Dead Man's Chest, Sparrow was killed--sent to Davy Jones' Locker. In the opening scenes, the viewer sees that death has not been kind to Sparrow--but that's not to say he hasn't found endless ways to amuse himself, cavorting with dozens of hallucinated versions of himself on the deck of the Black Pearl. But Sparrow is needed in this world, so a daring rescue brings him back. Keith Richards' much ballyhooed appearance as Jack's dad is little more than a cameo, though he does play a wistful guitar. But the action, as always, is more than satisfying, held together by Depp, who, outsmarting the far-better-armed British yet again, causes a bewigged commander to muse: "Do you think he plans it all out, or just makes it up as he goes along?" As far as fans are concerned, it matters not. --A.T. Hurley

In the previous Dead Man's Chest, Sparrow was killed--sent to Davy Jones' Locker. In the opening scenes, the viewer sees that death has not been kind to Sparrow--but that's not to say he hasn't found endless ways to amuse himself, cavorting with dozens of hallucinated versions of himself on the deck of the Black Pearl. But Sparrow is needed in this world, so a daring rescue brings him back. Keith Richards' much ballyhooed appearance as Jack's dad is little more than a cameo, though he does play a wistful guitar. But the action, as always, is more than satisfying, held together by Depp, who, outsmarting the far-better-armed British yet again, causes a bewigged commander to muse: "Do you think he plans it all out, or just makes it up as he goes along?" As far as fans are concerned, it matters not. --A.T. Hurley


