uncommondenominator wrote:
Honey69 wrote:
Last night we watched Babes in Toyland (1961). They got to the part where they were selling Tom to the Gypsies, and I thought "oh-oh! THAT wouldn't be acceptable today, with the implications about Gypsies!"
Song of the South I guess was banished.
Peter Pan (1953) had that politically incorrect song "What Makes the Red Man Red?" Later remakes of Peter Pan have completely omitted the Indian tribe from Never Never Land.
What are some other films that wouldn't make today's grade?
Another remake difference for you - Pete's Dragon (1977)
The original versions made it prominently clear that the child Pete was purchased with money by his evil adoptive family, and as such they had every right to work him to death since they legally owned him. There was a whole song about it. "We've got a bill of sale right here, he's our until he's dead!" was a lyric from it. This seems to have been entirely omitted from the more recent 2016 remake, where now he's an orphan living in the forest.
The Chipmunk Adventure movie. I really liked the movie and the new Chipmunk movies are trash, but they had scene where the Chipettes, who are supposed to be little girls, are dressed up like belly dancers while being held captive by an Egyptian prince who wants to make Brittany one of his wives when they are both adults, and they escape by charming a room full of cobras, dancing with them while singing the song "Gettin' Lucky". When I was young I thought it was funny and did not get the innuendo at all. And later the Chipmunks get captured by an island native tribe that take away their clothes and make them wear skimpy loin cloths, and one of the natives goes strutting by while wearing Alvin's shirt and carrying to a ghetto blaster that Alvin offered them, which I also found funny, but no no no that was wrong too because they're showing a bunch of stereotypical brown-skinned tribal people, but people don't seem to mind that part of the movie as much. Oh and the two bad guys in the movie smoke a lot, but they're the bad guys, so...