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Descartes
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05 May 2010, 1:53 am

I find that I don't really care much for movies or television shows in which the central characters are animals. I have multiple theories as to why, but the main one is that I think I can identify more with human characters than with animal characters--even though the animals are anthropomorphized.

Is anybody here the same? Maybe the opposite?



Eggman
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05 May 2010, 2:58 pm

Would aliens count as human if they are their planwets equilivant of humanity?


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Spazzergasm
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05 May 2010, 4:20 pm

That's the opposite of how I used to be. I only liked animated things with animals. I only liked animal, and inanimate object toys, as well. No dolls for me.
Now I love both. I think humans are better to watch though, if you're lonely. I like watching them to feel like I'm socialising. XD



Descartes
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05 May 2010, 7:23 pm

Eggman wrote:
Would aliens count as human if they are their planwets equilivant of humanity?


I never thought about movies with the central characters being aliens. I would consider that an "other" category. :wink:



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06 May 2010, 12:11 am

Spazzergasm wrote:
I think humans are better to watch though, if you're lonely. I like watching them to feel like I'm socialising. XD


I'm the same way.



Spazzergasm
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06 May 2010, 9:44 am

IdahoRose wrote:
Spazzergasm wrote:
I think humans are better to watch though, if you're lonely. I like watching them to feel like I'm socialising. XD


I'm the same way.


Cool. :) I wonder if that's an NT thing, as well? Probably.



persian85033
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06 May 2010, 1:04 pm

Would Genie and Carpet from Aladdin count as humans? They're my favorites. For animation, I do enjoy cartoons with anthromorphic characters most. And real/filmed/live I like shows with human characaters in them, if they're in Spanish. English, I'm pretty limited to Full House and 7th Heaven. Sabrina the Teenage witch, too, but that's because I love Salem. :lol:


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CockneyRebel
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06 May 2010, 4:49 pm

I could be happy with either human characters, or animal characters. It's all the same to me, which boils down to entertainment. 8)


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09 May 2010, 1:24 pm

Spazzergasm wrote:
That's the opposite of how I used to be. I only liked animated things with animals. I only liked animal, and inanimate object toys, as well. No dolls for me.
Now I love both. I think humans are better to watch though, if you're lonely. I like watching them to feel like I'm socialising. XD


I was the same way as a kid. Even today if an animal movie suddenly turns into a people movie such as "Hotel for Dogs" I turn it off and pop in Lion King or Titan A.E. One could argue Titan A.E. is a people movie but that is the exception and I've noticed whenever the people attempt to flirt or something, the aliens interupt them or that pitcular scene is rushed though.

I HATE people movies or movies in which the animals don't talk or simply "narrate" the movie or is actualy a person in an animal body (i.e. Salem the cat, or the goldfish from American Dad)


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Spazzergasm
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09 May 2010, 1:50 pm

I don't like Salem particularly, but I like the goldfish. :lol:

I have never watched Titans.



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09 May 2010, 3:07 pm

Spazzergasm wrote:
:lol:

I have never watched Titans.


You mean Titan A.E?

I've only watched American Dad once because I needed to study Rodger when I was creating an alien character of my own. I didn't like him because he was too obnoxious. I wanted an innocent, sweet, and sickening cute alien.


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Spazzergasm
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09 May 2010, 4:11 pm

Yeah, sorry. :P

I don't like Rodger at all. I like the fish, Klaus.



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09 May 2010, 9:56 pm

Spazzergasm wrote:
Yeah, sorry. :P

I don't like Rodger at all. I like the fish, Klaus.


I probably would too if he was truely a fish. I only saw one eppisode though and American Dad and Family Guy just aren't my cup of tea. You should watch Titan A.E..


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21 Jul 2015, 9:26 pm

I know this forum is over 5 years old, but I have always preferred animal cartoon characters over human ones. Ever since I was a little kid. And it's not that unusual. The most famous cartoon character in the world is a mouse. Who has been made into cuddly plush toys more, Garfield the cat or Jon Arbuckle? Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Sylvester and Tweety! I'll tell you what it is. Animals, even when they are anthropomorphic, are fun and interesting to draw and look at. Human characters are BORING. Simple as that.

I've only mentioned maybe 157 times that I've been into drawing cartoons since I was a kid, and I was proud to say that most of them were animals. The humanoid characters I usually prefer are fantasy creatures, like fairies or mermaids. Ordinary humans are soooo boring. :P



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14 Jan 2017, 8:00 am

Descartes wrote:
I find that I don't really care much for movies or television shows in which the central characters are animals. I have multiple theories as to why, but the main one is that I think I can identify more with human characters than with animal characters--even though the animals are anthropomorphized.

Is anybody here the same? Maybe the opposite?


I'm the opposite. Could care less for human characters.
Eggman wrote:
Would aliens count as human if they are their planwets equilivant of humanity?


Aliens always registered as anthro animals to me. But then all the sci fi movies I watched as a kid, the aliens were obviously based off of animals.


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15 Jan 2017, 2:16 am

No, I’m the complete opposite. I am far more interested in animal characters and I find it way more easily to care about and be touched by them. The only books / movies and series that actually make me cry, are the ones about animals/ something happening to animals.
That said, I don’t like movies with talking animals (like the Buddies movies). That’s too childish for my taste. If animals are gonna talk like people, then it needs to be animated in order for me to like it. I love animated movies with animals, monsters and living machines, but I am not typically into animated movies featuring a lot of people, like Frozen. (One exception was Lorax).

I just finished a book (My Grandmother Sends Her Regards and Apologises by Fredrik Backman) where the main character lost her grandma, felt ostracized in her own family (aside from her grandma who she loved desperately) and was bullied in school. Spoilers ahead! Don’t read the rest if you wanna read the book.
The book had a lot of humor and was very entertaining, and unputdownable, but as interested as I was in seeing where the story went, I didn’t feel much for the character (other than annoyance at times for being bothersome). The one sentence the author used to say that death’s real power isn’t that it kills people, it’s that it makes people lose the will to live, had more impact on me than reading about her ordeals.
But what made me cry were the two chapters near the end where the dog died. How my tears flowed!
The author used a very powerful technique there, talking about something terrible happening at the start of the first chapter, and all the if only’s the character felt and slowly told the story of what happened, and throughout the first of those two chapters, I kept hoping that somehow something changed so it wouldn’t happen. That was very reminiscent of the novella “Att döda ett barn” (“To kill a child” by Stig Dagerman, (and probably also the novel "The Silence Between Breaths" by Cath Staincliffe which I haven’t read).


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