The guy who wrote the film is a freaking crybaby.
Take a gander to this quote...
The guy clearly doesn't get the different between being a bully and just having a huge hatred of something completely idiotic.
The Film is Bad. Pure and simple. There
is a lot of violence in kid's media, sure. Kids need a safe, cartoony environment where nothing harms or scares them? Agreed with that too. But there are just
so many better things that do that job. In fact, quite to the contrary, there's a humongous flood of preschool programming. You can't punt a football without hitting a Dora clone. Why we need a movie that's only remarkable for sucking on every level is beyond me. As for me, I don't think kids that young would really appreciate seeing something on the big screen vs the comforts of their own home with a DVD that you can pause. And I
really don't think kids need a movie that rewards them for shouting and running around in the aisles (again, my experience with Bolt was a nightmare). A movie theater is a place where it's okay to get an audience reaction of laughing and the occasional audible "Oh SNAP!" but talking through out the film is a no-no. Getting up and running around should have the ushers throw your family out.
Anyway... while I do agree there should be some childlike wonder that has to require hiding children from harsh realities, if you go too far and show a diabetic unreality, you aren't doing kids any favors. Anyone hear of
The Complainer is Always Wrong? That was a concept from the 80's that was dreadful. I don't know what it came from... parental groups, some political conspiracy (I don't want to go into it)... it just sucked and poisoned cartoons of that era. The worst being (and I apologize in advance if anyone likes this show, cuz you're gonna hear an ear full) the Bizketts. Everyone that isn't one of the little dogs and the villain pretty much has a freaking lobotomy. The one dog that isn't perpetually stuck with a smile on his face (well, okay... there's one that's always sad, but he doesn't count) is whiny and unpleasant. Of all the ghastly Smurfs knockoffs, it's one of the worst. Again, if you like it, no hard feelings. Our Garfield and Friends enthusiast here would probably know that's where the Buddy Bears came from (technically, it was from Mark Evainier's annoyed stint writing Dungeons and Dragons, but still...) I have no idea who thought that was beneficial... but it wasn't.
I agree we should shield kids from
some hate and
some jealousy, and some of the bad feelings... but if that's the case, how are we going to deal with those kids
having those feelings? The characters seem like gibberish catchphrase spouting, constantly happy, lobotomized uniminds. That's not that great for kids. Then you have Oscar on Sesame Street saying "Hey! It's okay to be angry and grouchy. it's a human emotion."