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3 pictures - 1 missing word. Figure out the word from the scrambled letters provided, spell it and...
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Pan Book 3: Key to the Capitol
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#1 Best Seller in App Store Kids and Books in 42+ countries Featured “Best New Apps" &...
Pan Book 4: Capitol Rising
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Avokiddo ABC Ride - Fun Alphabet & Spelling Games
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Have you ever seen the letter E hatched from an egg? How about a K popping out of a kangaroo’s...
50 Under 50: Innovators of the 21st Century
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Features design innovations that have become the visual models for idea advancement worldwide. "...a...
Eduardo Sanchez recommended Do the Right Thing (1989) in Movies (curated)
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123 Kids Fun EDUCATION - Free Educational Games for Preschool Kids and Toddlers including counting,...
Noddy Toyland Detective - Let's Investigate
Education and Games
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Join Noddy as Toyland’s most famous detective in an adventure filled with storytelling, learning...
The Craggus (360 KP) rated The Queens Corgi (2019) in Movies
Jul 8, 2019
At its core, it’s a story of Rex (Jack Whitehall), an adorable but arrogant Corgi who lets being the ‘top dog’ go to his head and ends up in the doghouse, stranded outside the Palace and at the mercy of the ferocious leader of the pack at the local dog pound. So far, so predictable.
Where “The Queen’s Corgi” surprises is in its decision to include in cutesy cartoon the divisive figure of President Trump and his current wife, especially as it involves the real-life self-confessed sexual predator in a sub-plot about mating his (fictional) Corgi with one of the Queen’s pets, a storyline rife with casual coercion and canine sexual assault. From that tawdry and uncomfortable opening, we progress onwards to the meat of the plot which sees Rex encounter an underground dogfighting ring operating at the Pound.
Add in a couple of pretty scary sequences involving nearly getting run over, a surprisingly graphic near-drowning and an attempted murder by arson and you start to understand why this European production has been rated PG when its subject should be an easy-U. It earns it.
Some of this will, of course, pass over the heads of younger children, at least on a conscious level, but there’s such a nasty undertone to the whole movie that you should be thinking twice about seeing it. To UK children, of course, Donald Trump is something of a distant, already cartoonish figure, possibly a bit of a bogeyman but the casual humanisation and normalising of a figure like Trump is a dangerous and slippery slope (as Jimmy Kimmel can attest to) and sets an unpleasant precedent for future ‘family entertainment’. The fact that it pokes fun at him up to and including him getting bitten in the dick by a Corgi doesn’t mitigate his appearance, it just makes it more inappropriate.
I’m genuinely surprised this has been allowed to pass without comment from the Royal Household but perhaps they hope it will quickly fade into obscurity, even though this would benefit from a more activist Royal prerogative – this is one movie that should be sent to The Tower for the rest of its life.