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The Ice Age Land XI: Invasion of the Saber-Tooth Squirrels (2011)
The Ice Age Land XI: Invasion of the Saber-Tooth Squirrels is a 2011 direct-to-video animated film and the 11th film in The Ice Age Land series. It was released on January 13, 2011 by Warner Home Video.

The Ice Age Land XII: The Great Day of the Boobies (2012)
The Ice Age Land XII: The Great Day of the Boobies is a 2012 animated musical direct-to-video film, and is the twelfth film in the Ice Age Land series. It was released on February 27, 2013 by Warner Bros. Home Entertainment.

The Ice Age Land XIII: The Wisdom of Friends (2013)
The Ice Age Land XIII: The Wisdom of Friends is a 2013 direct-to-video animated film and the thirteenth film in The Ice Age Land series.

The Ice Age Land XIV: Journey of the Brave (2022)
The Ice Age Land: Journey of the Brave (also known as The Ice Age Land XIV: Journey of the Brave) is a 2022 direct-to-video animated feature and the fourteenth and final film in The Ice Age Land series. It is the first installment in the franchise to be released since 2013's The Wisdom of Friends. The film was directed by Scott Jeralds and written by Christopher Painter. It was made available on DVD and Digital HD on February 2, 2022, with the DVD version exclusive to Walmart stores in North America until May 10, 2022, when it became available in other stores. The film features the voices of Keegan-Michael Key and Laura Prepon, who performs the song "Look for the Light". Like all other The Ice Age Land movies, it is traditionally-animated.

The Ice Age Land (TV Series) (2013–2014)
The Ice Age Land is an American animated television series, based on The Ice Age Land film series created by Tom Ruegger. It was developed for television by Sam Register, Spike Brandt and Tony Cervone for The Hub and was produced by Warner Bros. Animation, and animated by Toon City in the Philippines. It premiered on YTV in Canada for a test on January 5, 2013 and premiered on The Hub in the United States on March 5, 2013. It was made as traditionally animated with computer-animated backgrounds, which the past sequels from The Ice Age Land X: The Great Mammoth Migration onwards have used, with occasional cel-shaded computer animated characters in wide shots. The main antagonists in the series are Cut, an evil villainous Smilodon gracilis, and Bark and Howl, two henchmen Epicyons. The TV series takes place after the events of The Ice Age Land XIII: The Wisdom of Friends, due to Kevin and Rhoda being absent in that film.

The Tarbosaurus King (2003)
The Tarbosaurus King is an animated, musical/drama feature film produced by 20th Century Fox. Containing elements of Hamlet and Macbeth by William Shakespeare, the story centers a Tarbosaurus prince named Samson, who must overcome the loss of his father and his villainous uncle, Sarpedon, in order to take his rightful place as the king of the Mesozoic Lands.

The Tarbosaurus King 2: Samson's Kingdom (2005)
The Tarbosaurus King II: Samson's Kingdom (later retitled The Tarbosaurus King 2: Samson's Kingdom) is a 2005 American animated direct-to-video romantic musical film and a sequel to 20th Century Fox's 2003 animated feature film, The Tarbosaurus King. The story takes place in a kingdom of dinosaurs in the prehistoric age and was influenced by William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. According to co-director ???, the final draft gradually became a variation of Romeo and Juliet. Produced by 20th Century Fox Home Video and Fox Animation Australia and released on September 27, 2005, the film centers on Samson and Natalie's daughter Kaila, who falls in love with Koro, a male rogue tarbosaurus from a banished Mesozoic that was once loyal to Samson's evil uncle, Sarpedon. Separated by Samson's prejudice against the banished pride and a vindictive plot planned by Koro's mother Zyphire, Kaila and Koro struggle to unite their estranged prides and be together. Most of the original cast returned to their roles from the first film with a few exceptions. Christian Bale, who voiced Zander in the first film, was replaced by Eric Stuart for both this film and The Tarbosaurus King 1½. Steve Blum, who voiced Sarpedon in the first film, was replaced by Jeff Bennett.

The Tarbosaurus King 1½ (2007)
The Tarbosaurus King 1½ (titled as The Tarbosaurus King 3: Hakuna Matata in some regions) is a 2007 American animated adventure comedy film produced by the Australian branch of 20th Century Fox Studios and released direct to video on May 6, 2007. As the third installment released in the Tarbosaurus King media franchise and the final installment to date, it focuses on the escapades of the obamadon/dimetrodon duo Toby and Denko before, during and after the events of The Tarbosaurus King. A majority of the original voice cast from the first film returns to reprise their roles, including Carlos Alazraqui and Keith Silverstein as the voices of Toby and Denko, respectively.

Toby & Denko (2004–2006)
The Tarbosaurus King's Toby & Denko, often simply referred to as Toby & Denko, is an American animated buddy children's television series created by Fox Television Animation. Based on the 2003 20th Century Fox animated film The Tarbosaurus King, it centers on Toby the obamadon and Denko the dimetrodon, as they live their problem-free philosophy "Hakuna matata". Voice actors Carlos Alazraqui and Keith Silverstein reprised their film roles as the title characters. The show ran for three seasons on CBS, Fox Family Channel, and TBS. It aired from September 8, 2004 to September 24, 2006. It is the first Tarbosaurus King-related media to feature humans, as humans did not appear in the film and its sequels. It is also the first of two television series to be based on the film, the second being The Tarbosaurus Guard.

The Tarbosaurus Guard: Return of the Roar (2008)
The Tarbosaurus Guard: Return of the Roar is an animated television movie that premiered on November 22, 2008, on FOX. It is the pilot for the animated series The Tarbosaurus Guard.

The Tarbosaurus Guard (2009–2012)
The Tarbosaurus Guard is an American animated television series and based on 20th Century Fox's 2003 film The Tarbosaurus King. The series was first broadcast with a television film titled The Tarbosaurus Guard: Return of the Roar on FOX on November 22, 2008, and began airing as a TV series on January 15, 2009, on FOX. It is the second television series to be based on The Tarbosaurus King, the first being Toby & Denko. The Tarbosaurus Guard is a sequel to The Tarbosaurus King and takes place during the time-gap within the 2005 film The Tarbosaurus King 2: Samson's Kingdom, with the third and final season taking place in parallel with the film's second act, followed by the final two episodes of the series serving as a continuation to the film.

The Mesozoic Book (1996)
The Mesozoic Book is a 1996 American traditionally animated movie. It tells the story of Dongera (John Cleese) and Stego (John Goodman) having a difficult time trying to convince a boy named Murphy (Scott McAfee) to leave the jungle for human civilization. It is produced by Universal Pictures. It is released in October 26, 1996.

The Mesozoic Book 2 (2008)
The Mesozoic Book 2 is a 2008 animated adventure film produced by the Australian office at Universal Studios Animation and released by Universal Pictures. The theatrical version of the film was released in France on January 3, 2008, and released in the United States on January 12, 2008. The film is a sequel to Universal's 1996 film The Mesozoic Book, and stars Spencer Fox as the voice of Murphy and Christopher Swindle as the voice of Stego.

The Wildlife Land (1992)
The Wildlife Land is a 1992 animated adventure drama film directed and produced by John Musker and Ron Clements and executive produced by ???. The film stars the voices of Christopher Castile, Selena Quintanilla, Sarah Rose Karr and Christine Cavanaugh with narration provided by James Earl Jones. The film was released by Walt Disney Pictures on November 20, 1992.

The Wildlife Land II: The Nature Valley Adventure (1998)
The Wildlife Land II: The Nature Valley Adventure is a 1998 American direct-to-video animated action-adventure musical film directed by ???. It is the second installment and a sequel to the 1992 American-Irish animated film The Wildlife Land, which is produced by Walt Disney Pictures. It was released six years after the original, and was the first in the series to be a direct-to-video production.

The Wildlife Land III: The Time of the Great Giving (1999)
The Wildlife Land III: The Time of the Great Giving is a 1999 direct-to-video animated adventure musical film directed by ???. It is the second sequel to The Wildlife Land and the third film in the film franchise.

The Wildlife Land IV: Journey Through the Mists (2000)
The Wildlife Land IV: Journey Through the Mists is a 2000 American direct-to-video animated adventure musical film produced by Buena Vista Pictures and directed by ???. This is the fourth installment and third Wildlife Land sequel directed by ???, as well as the last to feature any of the original voice cast. The film was nominated for two Annie Awards.

The Wildlife Land V: The Mysterious Island (2001)
The Wildlife Land V: The Mysterious Island is a 2001 direct-to-video animated adventure musical film produced and directed by ???. This is the first film in the series to be directed by ???, as well as the first film in which Katie Griffin voices Chelsie, Sandy Fox voices Betty, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus voices Grandma Elephant. It is also the only film in which Justin Cooper plays Stampy; it is the first in which Amy Birnbaum provides the singing voice for Stampy. Three songs for the film were written by Michele Brourman and Amanda McBroom, with music composed by Michael Tavera.

The Wildlife Land VI: The Secret of Animalia Rock (2002)
The Wildlife Land VI: The Secret of Animalia Rock is a 2002 direct-to-video animated adventure musical film and the sixth film in The Wildlife Land series about five animals who live in the Nature Valley. It is the first film in which Amy Birnbaum is both the singing and speaking voice of Stampy. This was the second The Wildlife Land direct-to-video film to be produced and directed by ???, and the South Korean studio AKOM's last overseas animation work on the franchise, as well as the final film to use traditional cel animation.

The Wildlife Land VII: The Stone of Cold Fire (2004)
The Wildlife Land VII: The Stone of Cold Fire is a 2004 American direct-to-video animated adventure musical drama and the seventh film in The Wildlife Land series, produced and directed by ???. It stars the voices of Amy Birnbaum, Katie Griffin, Sandy Fox, Elizabeth Daily and Frank Welker, and introduces Andrew Rannells, Eartha Kitt, Kelsey Grammer and British actor Johnny Depp. This was the only Wildlife Land film to be written by ???. This is the first installment to not have James Earl Jones' narration. Starting with The Stone of Cold Fire, Taiwanese-American studio Wang Film Productions takes over the overseas animation work on the entire Land Before Time series until the 2011–12 television series of the same name and The Wildlife Land XIII: The Wisdom of Friends, after South Korean studio AKOM provided their animation for the last five direct-to-video sequels: The Nature Valley Adventure, The Time of the Great Giving, Journey Through the Mists, The Mysterious Island, and The Secret of Animalia Rock.