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The Care Bears were an eighties cartoon-and-toy-line, strictly following the eighties credo of "Be Brightly Colored, And Make No Sense" (also see Rainbow Bright, Strawberry Shortcake, and My Little Pony) Those of you who have passing knowledge of the Care Bears, please back me up when uninitiated readers come to me sputtering that I have gotten to the point where I'm just making stuff up. I'm not; this is how it goes. The Care Bears are colorful bears with various tattoos on their tummies, these tattoos dictating their sole personality trait and power. What power? Why, to forcibly inject someone with a particular emotion! So Grumpy Bear can only force people to be Grumpy, Nervous Twitch Bear can only strong-arm kids into jittering their legs, etc. While most bear species are firmly land-dwellers, the Care Bears take more to clouds. They have a cloud city (reclaimed when Lando got cold feet and abandoned it) called "Care-A-Lot" complete with cloud houses and cloud cars. They also seem to be able to use stars without being incinerated by the thermonuclear radiation and heat. I'm not exactly certain what the Care Bears do all day, except they seem to spend a heckuva lot of time looking through telescopes at small children to see if any of them need "help". I don't know about you, but if I'm an eight year-old and I discover that pantless bears are peeping in on me at all hours, I'm joining the Boy Scouts pronto and picking up that Marksmanship merit badge. As the movie opens, the Care Bears have been stalking a few kids who don't have friends. Picking these young 'uns as vulnerable bait, they come down to make "contact" and play a quick game of emotional manipulation. After about the third or fourth minute of various Bears giggling and playing with rainbows and gushing on and ON and ON about how wonderful emotions and friends are... well, it's hunting season, and Justin needs a new bear skin rug to go by the fire. By minute 11, the Care Bears have kidnapped two kids who want nothing to do with the Care Bears. But the Care Bears refuse to let them go until they've been hugged enough to be converted into friends. I don't care what religion or philosophy you might think is pushy in trying to bring you over to their way of thinking -- the Care Bears are far pushier. Their hearts and rainbows cover up a Nazi regime of smiling terror. Nicholas, a down-and-out magician's nephew, buys into a talking magic book that gives him power in exchange for draining the world of caring. Win-win, I say. A Care Bear tries to convince Nick of his folly, but Nick knows that controlling magic is a mite bit better than paying a furry psychiatrist hourly bills for the next twenty years. Many songs, packs of worn crayons, and a heretical belief in the power of tummy feelings later, the Care Bears restore their mandatory "caring" upon the whole earth. It's a shame they did, really. Otherwise I wouldn't be caring about how sugary-awful this movie is. So what is the message that The Care Bears Movie is trying to pass onto the children of the world? I'm not exactly sure, but it may be something like this: "Hey kids! If you're ever being stalked by effeminate 'Bears' that have been spying on you for some time, know a lot of personal details about your life, desire to control your emotions, and claim to want to be your 'friend', then, heck, just go with them. Worst thing that'll happen is you'll end up in a cloud village, eating cloud cakes and skipping over rainbows. Promise!"
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
Groovy Quotes
Share Bear: Look! I'm hydroplaning! Share Bear: Secret Bear says not to worry about falling -- worry about the lion instead! Soundtrack Review
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