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Animated Tales of the World: Navigation

Animated Tales of the World - TV-Y

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4 stars

Global folk tales, some fabulous, others less so.

TV Rating: TV-Y Network: HBO Family Genre: Children, Cartoons, & Animation

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Common Sense Note

Parents need to know that these folk tales haven't been sanitized or modernized. If the daughter kills her wicked father in the folk tale, he'll die in a hail of brimstone here, too. And if the story revolved around the importance of salt to meat, this story will as well, with no additional explanation for kids who've never gone without a refrigerator. Many folk tales are violent, and some of these are as well, with brothers hitting brothers and kings threatening death to any who thwart them. But you can rest assured that the wicked will get their comeuppance.

Families can discuss the traditional fairy tale themes and why they're often the same in every culture -- the Cinderella story, the boy who goes off to seek his fortune, the king passing on his kingdom or refusing to let it go. Can kids spot these same themes in modern movies, books, and cartoons as well? Can they think of different versions of the same story that they've heard over time? Because each story is presented within its own culture, some offer a chance to discuss things more commonly found in other cultures, like Holland's windmills.

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Common Sense Review

Reviewed By: KJ Dell'Antonia

ANIMATED TALES OF THE WORLD is a collection of folk tales from many countries and cultures, animated and voiced with the intent of staying true to their place of origin.

The results are somewhat erratic. Some episodes are wonderful, others forgettable -- but it's worth tuning in. If nothing else, every show is a small glimpse into the history of another culture, and because unfamiliar elements aren't washed away or overly explained, a parent watching with a child will have a lot to talk about.

Every episode looks different, with animation styles that range from puppetry to claymation to rough sketches. Some have two stories in half an hour, others one. Some are narrated, others aren't -- it's a mixed bag, but this variety offers something new to kids who are used to joining a familiar narrative every time they turn on the television. These small tales are more challenging than that and invite both more thought and more interaction.

Fairy tales and folk tales themselves are a mixture of good and bad from a parent's viewpoint. These are classic stories -- the seven original plots -- and they lie at the root of a large part of human experience and the way we choose to talk about it. Movies and shows from Finding Nemo to Harry Potter owe much to these tales. But they're often violent and certainly not politically correct. The kings are nearly always kings, the goal is to marry the princess or win the bag of gold, and the servants live belowstairs and the master above.

These are straightforward stories. They haven't been jazzed up with explosions or clever repartee and fart jokes to grab kids' attention, and yet they still do. That alone makes them worth watching.

Fans of Animated Tales will also like Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child.

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Content
CS adults kids

Sexual Content

Violence

Mild fairy tale/cartoon violence: guards bopping each other over the head, dragging away princes who fail in their quests.

Language

Message

 

Social Behavior

These are folk tales -- everyone isn't always nice to one another, but the wicked, greedy, boorish, or otherwise unpleasant pay or repent in the end.

 

Commercialism

 

Drug/Alcohol/Tobacco

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