What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that this hilarious show from the
creator of the lovable Wallace and Gromit characters puts
unscripted dialogue from the British public into the mouths of
claymation animals expounding on social topics like irksome
neighbors, politics, and pet peeves. Families will find a lot
to smile about here with great animation, virtually no iffy
content, and some mild potty humor sure to please kids. The
ironic quality of the comedy, based in dialogue paired with
unusual orators (like hyenas whose interview is disrupted over
and over by a giggling fit), will be lost on most kids, but
they'll love the cute characters as much as parents will enjoy
the show's superb wit.
Families can talk about how the meaning of words can change with other influences. How do the animals' appearances and surroundings affect the meaning of their dialogue? How would the words seem different if your kids saw the actual human speaker? Parents can also discuss the show's animation style. Do you like the claymation characters or traditional animated characters better? Do the claymation characters seem more or less realistic? Why?
Common Sense Media Review
CREATURE COMFORTS began in 1990 as an Oscar-winning
short
film starring zoo animals who discussed the ups and downs
of their new living situations, using commentary from the
British public to create the animals' dialogue.
Now creator Nick Park (who also brought viewers laughs in The Incredible Adventures of Wallace & Gromit and Chicken Run ) adds to the fun in a new series of shorts with even more characters of the mammalian, reptilian, crustacean, and even floral kind, all of whom have lots to say on just about any topic you can imagine.
The show plays out like a series of man-on-the-street interviews, capturing the speakers in their natural surroundings. Often there's a microphone in view and some funny background commotion unrelated to the interview (think of a TV blooper clip where a man trips and falls behind a journalist taping a story). Most of the talking is done by the animals within the camera frame, though once in a while they're kept on task -- since some have a tendency to go off on tangents -- by questions from an unseen interviewer.
Cameras take viewers from county fairs and safari parks to suburban homes, documenting animals' opinions on a variety of subjects. Have you ever wondered whether a sea lion would consider liposuction or what most grates on the nerves of a clam? Well now's your chance to find out. Viewers will also hear why speed limits should be strictly enforced from a spider who has made a car's side mirror his home. And a horse outside Buckingham Palace will offer his take on the state of the monarchy.
There's no end to the fun in this show, and it's a rare find that will entertain both kids and their parents, with no eyebrow-raising content to speak of. Adults will enjoy the ironic pairing of unscripted commentary with just the right creatures -- like flies trapped in a spider's web arguing about how long they've each "lived" there, or elderly female bats who can hardly make it through their interview because of their tendency to lapse into gossip.
While much of this subtlety will bypass youngsters, the show also has a more obvious variety of cutesy comedy that will garner a howl from grade-schoolers. For instance, one scene shows a sign on the fence enclosing a couple of tapirs that says "Beware! These tapirs may spray you." Sure enough, one of them aims a hose at nearby park visitors.
Park's mastery of claymation tops off this great show by making the animals and their surroundings convincingly real -- which makes the comedy just that much more hysterical.
For more insight into the world as seen through the eyes of animals, try Lady and the Tramp or Ice Age . For a plaything's point of view, try Toy Story . And don't miss Park's cracking feature film, Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit.
Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.

