Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child - TV-Y
Common Sense Note
Parents need to know that these aren't sanitized fairy tales. If the original tale involved greed and corruption, this one does too. If the prince's head was chopped off in the classic version, he's going to lose it here too, although it's not going to be shown. Parents may want to pick and choose from the titles to select fairy tales their child will understand, like The Three Little Pigs for younger viewers, and save the likes of The Pied Piper for more sophisticated kids or for watching together.
Families can discuss the classic morals that pervade these tales. Was the king fair? Should his daughter have lied to him? Does it pay to be greedy, selfish, or rude? With older kids, parents can have fun talking about how much of our shared culture comes from these and other fairy tales, from expressions like "it's time to pay the piper" and "the wolf's at the door" to current movies and books with their roots deep in these stories, like Harry Potter. Families can also discuss the richly diverse casts, although faces of many colors aren't as unusual in today's cartoons as they once were -- thanks in part to this series, which was created in 1995.
Common Sense Review
Reviewed By: KJ Dell'Antonia
HAPPILY EVER AFTER: FAIRY TALES FOR EVERY CHILD is a collection of short animated fairy tales voiced by the very famous, from Wesley Snipes to Henry Kissinger.
For a time in the '90s, everyone who was anyone had a cameo here, particularly African-American and Latino actors. The stories range from classics like Goldilocks and the Three Bears to the more obscure, like The Twelve Dancing Princesses.
While the language has been modernized, the tales themselves have not. Although billed as "politically correct" fairy tales (and, at the time, mocked and lampooned as such), the tales themselves aren't actually any more PC than they've ever been. The princess will still marry the prince who fulfills her father's demands, the wolf will still be killed rather than restored to the wild, servants will still kowtow to their masters. The main difference is that the master may be black and the servant white -- in fact, it's almost certain to be that way. Adults know that's groundbreaking. Kids aren't likely to notice -- which is the point.
The animation, which differs from cartoon to cartoon, is generally excellent in the classic sense, although it lacks the polish of the computer-assisted programs your kids may be used to. The adaptations are fun and full of jokes for savvy kids, like the minion named "Toe-day" who objects to being called "toady," and newspaper headlines like "Did They Even Have Newspapers Back Then?"
There's a certain level of cartoon violence, like guards bonking each other over the head and princes being dragged to dungeons. It's nothing to kids used to the likes of Power Rangers, but it may be startling to those who haven't yet gone beyond Blue's Clues.
Fans of Happily Ever After will enjoy other movies based on classic stories, like Chicken Little and The Wind in the Willows: A Tale of Two Toads, as well as HBO Family's series Animated Tales of the World Some titles from Happily Ever After are also available on DVD and VHS.
Rate It!
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ViolenceThese are not sanitized fairy tales. Daughters kill their evil fathers, brothers fight roughly. But although the facts aren't hidden, it's not graphic. |
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Social BehaviorThis series was designed to offer a more racially diverse cast of fairy-tale characters, and it does. Some characters do questionable things, like promising to marry one of their daughters to anyone who can solve a problem. |
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DVD