This is a “smart” cartoon pro & nbsp; economic crisis I was amazed by the Germans with this great cartoon. This is a chic “smart” cartoon about the economy from Europeans. I was struck by how the Germans decided to explain the economic crisis to children. The cartoon is gorgeous. The age limit is 6+ and the cartoon touches on the topics of the economy, the role of security forces in the country, explains the role of the police in peacetime. These are very difficult topics, but the Germans coped with the task. On the fingers, it is explained that economic crises can safely change the power in the country, and not all citizens will be satisfied. The economy is very complex, but in this cartoon, through the Knight Rusty, the basics are explained (this is very gently and politically correct).
It's a science cartoon. It makes kids smarter. Makes them ask real-life questions (rather than dreaming of a fictional magical land). The cartoon is very realistic. This is not a tale about the knight Rusty, the protector of the kingdom. This is a scientific cartoon for children of capitalist countries who live in today’s realities. I was struck by how directors Thomas Bodenstein and Marcus Hamann made such a chic cartoon. The cartoon exhorts the children, “Make inventions.” Some of them will be useful to the country, and they will also bring you money (as Rusty did). This chic “smart” cartoon encourages children and adults to create, invent, try to monetize their experience and knowledge. .
I was also struck by one thought pervading the entire cartoon: “The change of political regimes in a country leads only to its modernization.” Under the king there were knights on horses, and under the chief of police there was already aviation. This is a great cartoon that pushes children to invention, to creativity, to friendship, to knowledge.
Yes, in modern society, people are willing to pay only for rating shows, for first-class entertainment. And it is good that such basics are explained in this cartoon to children 6+. In this cartoon there are no good and evil, there is economic expediency.
9 out of 10