Discrimination against redheads The third Antoshka cartoon, and the musical again. “Red, Red” may not be as famous as a song about potatoes or two geese, but if you like Soviet cartoons, you probably know about this part.
After the hilarious and humorous Two Merry Geese, the franchise took on an unexpectedly more serious tone. The franchise... a big word for Antoshka, isn't it? But another time. If the first part condemned laziness, and the second mockery of the elderly, the third touches on discrimination on hair color, and for this cartoon is worth saying “thank you.” The guys mock the red Antoshka so much that they bring him to tears, and then even the sun rises to his defense. But if children’s pranks are even more or less understandable, then the bullying of old women over the same red grandfather is almost a diagnosis. The cartoon, of course, furnishes everything comedic, but, reviewing it at a conscious age, involuntarily shakes your head with a sense of condemnation.
Antoshka here again appears in the company of a crater, who never reached the intellectual level of geese, however, imitating the owner, learned to spit seeds. As an acceptable form of self-defense. The funniest moment of Red is the moment with an old picture of his grandfather. In relation to Antoshka, he turns out to be a great-grandfather.
To be honest, excessive ridicule of the main characters leaves not too pleasant aftertaste. If "Two Merry Goose" please, then "Red, Red ...", perhaps, is perceived more contradictory.
5 out of 10