Alvin and the Chipmunks come to mind. Pure 80s show right around the time where it was already thick with lots of other cartoons of it’s time and just happened to be one of the popular ones. Ended in 1990, pretty much saying that it knew the 80s was over. Released a CGI film in 2007 that somehow spanned over 4 movies. All of which, while numerically looking good at the box office, was really criticized because it was one of those film series jerked out from the era it was in and fucked over.

  • PoopingCough@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Not saying it wouldn’t still do well, but Tiger King released at the absolute perfect time: March 2020. A time where everyone was bored, maybe scared, and in need of an escape that was simultaneously too ridiculous to be reality while at the same rule too unbelievable to have been made up.

    Side note, the guy who made Tiger King made another docuseries cake Chimp Crazy that I find is even better.

  • SnokenKeekaGuard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    Well there’s a lot of shows with a dated sense of humour and morality. So I won’t call any of those out. Y’know anything racist or sexist etc whether intentional or not.

    I’m also ignoring the fact that many shows would fail now BC what they did back then would be cliche by now. If Tolkien wrote lotr now it would be a good genre book but not what it is.

    Having explained my criteria I’ll go for the comedies of Jim Carey. I guess anything with a laugh track for one. I think comedy dates bad, slapstick physical comedy on the other hand is more universal and lives on, like Conan O’Brien for example. But I still don’t think that dumb and dumber would work. I’d also add superbad to this.

    The thing is all art is a product of it’s era, being timeless is difficult and nearly impossible. An Alfred Hitchcock movie released today would fail since all that he’s done has changed cinema already.