Have you noticed the different type ways cartoon studio use of relationship between anthropomophic animals and humans in animation.
Cartoons in which there are both talking animals and humans, I noticed in Hanna Barbara, the animal that could talk and act human did so freely to humans in their world. And it was just a way of life, even in shows in which some animals talked and others animals did not, animals talked and some acted even more human, and no one thought nothing was unusual about it. I think it continue to HB's successor Cartoon Network Studios, in which if animals talked, the humans knew about it, or the animals didn't talk at all. My Gym Partner Is A Monkey is a obvious example.
On the flip side, Disney mostly did the opposite. The cartoons in which the worlds had both anthropomophic animals and humans, mostly the animals only talked to the audiance, the human characters either didn't know, or the animals just translated to the audience their speech. There was quite a few accpetions of course, Cinderella, The Jungle Book, and The Rescuers. (though I noticed the human characters that talked to the animals, had no human family or friends, humans with no human companion, and maybe were so missed up, they could understand the animals)
I guess that means in the HB world, it is normal for humans to talk with animals, while in the world of Disney, if you talk to animals, you didn't have a normal life, and probably have a screw lose.
Warner Brothers mixed it up more than Disney and HB. Sometimes the animals and humans talked to each other, other times they did not.
As I stated earlier, in the Hanna Barbara if a animal talked, he can talk to all of the characters in their world human or not. Though in the early episodes of Scooby Doo Where Are You, it wasn't clear if the rest of the gang understood Scooby. I really think the writers what direction they wanted to go with Scooby, and decided the other characters understood him as much as the audience.
Cartoons in which there are both talking animals and humans, I noticed in Hanna Barbara, the animal that could talk and act human did so freely to humans in their world. And it was just a way of life, even in shows in which some animals talked and others animals did not, animals talked and some acted even more human, and no one thought nothing was unusual about it. I think it continue to HB's successor Cartoon Network Studios, in which if animals talked, the humans knew about it, or the animals didn't talk at all. My Gym Partner Is A Monkey is a obvious example.
On the flip side, Disney mostly did the opposite. The cartoons in which the worlds had both anthropomophic animals and humans, mostly the animals only talked to the audiance, the human characters either didn't know, or the animals just translated to the audience their speech. There was quite a few accpetions of course, Cinderella, The Jungle Book, and The Rescuers. (though I noticed the human characters that talked to the animals, had no human family or friends, humans with no human companion, and maybe were so missed up, they could understand the animals)
I guess that means in the HB world, it is normal for humans to talk with animals, while in the world of Disney, if you talk to animals, you didn't have a normal life, and probably have a screw lose.
Warner Brothers mixed it up more than Disney and HB. Sometimes the animals and humans talked to each other, other times they did not.
As I stated earlier, in the Hanna Barbara if a animal talked, he can talk to all of the characters in their world human or not. Though in the early episodes of Scooby Doo Where Are You, it wasn't clear if the rest of the gang understood Scooby. I really think the writers what direction they wanted to go with Scooby, and decided the other characters understood him as much as the audience.