Western Animation - Discuss American, Canadian, and European cartoons here (or just bitch about wokeshit, I guess)

Got around to watching the Netflix Skull Island animation. While it has some worthwhile scenes it's average at best. The target audience are TV Trope rotted minds.

Also one of the protagonists helped murder a number of the mercenaries her mother brought along to help find her. This is mentioned and then acted as though it's not worth mentioning afterwards.
 
When it comes to studios from the Golden Age of Animation, people don't give Screen Gems any credit. I'd say it's been treated the same as Famous Studios or Terrytoons, and many historians would just prefer but muh UPA and throw Screen Gems (and even Hanna-Barbera, as it technically counts as something from Columbia back then) under the rug. Don't get me wrong, I love UPA and all, but something like The Fox and The Crow was actually pretty silly and fun.
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They tried with these guys, at least they had a decent life in comics.
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You ADHD nigger, that's not a Terrytoons property. You're thinking of the late-80s Mighty Mouse, and it was actually pretty influential in the animation industry back in the day.
That wasn't even a sole John K. production: Ralph Bakshi was behind it, and John K. only directed the first season.
 
"They requested that some of the content to be left out for it's distasteful content": So in other words we didn't get see the best stuff from that
Yeah dunno why whoever has these drawings are being a weasily little blueballing faggot drip feeding us one drawing at a time, unless they're trying to string along the interests for as long as possible which is equally as gay instead of dropping it all at once.
 
That wasn't even a sole John K. production: Ralph Bakshi was behind it, and John K. only directed the first season.
That's exactly my point here. Ralph Bakshi's Mighty Mouse reboot from the late-80s have kickstarted a lot of then would be animators and directors that would later be more successful in the future such as Bruce Timm and Andrew Stanton.
 
That's exactly my point here. Ralph Bakshi's Mighty Mouse reboot from the late-80s have kickstarted a lot of then would be animators and directors that would later be more successful in the future such as Bruce Timm and Andrew Stanton.
That's how I see it, without Bakshi, we might not've gotten out of the corporate, commercialized blandness that affected cartoons in the 80's.
 
Who will be our modern-day Bakshi to escape from the corporate, wokefied blandness that plagues cartoons today?
Only time will tell. All I know is that woke culture is surprisingly on the way out, but nobody knows when it will die. Culture and politics change overtime, like for how the 90s and 2000s both changed the worldly landscape after the Cold War, despite stuff like LA riots, Waco, Oklahoma City, Columbine, 9/11, 7/7, late-2000s recession, etc. have happened afterwards.
 
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