Unironically a fantastic film and book though
I was about to snark that parents that give a fuck can refer to a movie’s age rating but then I learnt that, until recently, it was classified in the UK as U (universal, suitable for all) because “Animation removes the realistic gory horror in the occasional scenes of violence and bloodshed”. That’s certainly a view. Good thing to know that I just have to animate all of the fucked-up shit in my head and that makes it okay to sell to children. (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watership_Down_(film))
Edit: 6 and up in Germany. Cool. Cool cool cool.
So Heavy Metal rates U?
The Animals of Farthing Wood was the hot shit when I was in elementary school.
To be fair it is not that gory, it is mostly just genocide
Using Boost for Lemmy? Also having issues with the Wikipedia link? Here’s a working hyperlink: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watership_Down_(film)
I don’t know how but somehow I managed to avoid this one as a kid. I rented tons of videos and this one was square in the middle of them, but something about it made me avoid it like the plague. And this was long before internet, nor did any of my peers see it and tell me about it. Knowing how frail my mind was at that age, that was undoubtedly a good thing.
Maybe the place where you rented movies had a version with this cover
Lol it did, this brings back memories. I also seem to remember a still image of a roadkilled bunny(?) on the back which threw me off. But maybe that’s just Mandela effect.
Pairs well with a brave little appliance
Still my favorite animated film but I am a simple man.
I still wonder how the power cord bled when the bad man chopped it, or is that a false memory?
Reminds me of something from the opposite end of the lifespan. When I was young, they didn’t clear the theater after a movie, and they sometimes had “double features” where they’d alternate between two movies and you could watch both for one ticket price. My dad’s aunt lived with us (she was probably in her 70s at this point), and one day a couple of her friends picked her up to go watch “a double features of animal movies” at the local theater. They dropped her off some hours later and her face was grey - she said it was horrible, and didn’t want to talk about it.
It turned out the double features was Day of the Animals and Night of the Grizzly, basically both horror movies. They didn’t think they were allowed to leave during the movie, so they stayed through both.
I’m fuckin traumatized from this damn movie
Suffocating rabbits and rabbit murder gave me nightmares as a kid. I literally haven’t watched it in probably 40+ years.
My mum did this. I made it to the first death (hawk) and ran crying into the kitchen where she was. I was 4.
Then my first husband did this! He got me the DVD and it is still unwatched in the plastic wrap.
My current husband downloaded plague dogs because it’s criterion and that rests unwatched on the hard drive because I cannot even watch anything by this director.
However, I did read the book Watership Down in college, and wasn’t traumatized. I also collect copies of the book Private Life of the Rabbit which Richard Adams used as a source book
How has no one in the comments mentioned The Secret of NIMH yet?
Even worse, The Brave Frog (showa-era kids anime was seriously fucked up).
The secret of NIMH was brutal as a small child.
In a similar vein, the opening credits to Animals of Farthing Wood will stick with me forever.
If you watch the trailer it’s kinda clear it was not meant for kids. Watched it in 4th grade, loved it.
This shit traumatized me as a child.
The janky animation was so off putting I never managed to actually watch that movie.