It was in 1985 that the Care Bears had their first big-screen adventure. Those colorful, fuzzy do-gooders had already made the move to television, after previously going from greeting cards to plushies, but now their unwavering message of love had reached a wider audience. That original Care Bears film encapsulated the fundamentals of this lucrative […]
It was in 1985 that the Care Bears had their first big-screen adventure. Those colorful, fuzzy do-gooders had already made the move to television, after previously going from greeting cards to plushies, but now their unwavering message of love had reached a wider audience. That original Care Bears film encapsulated the fundamentals of this lucrative franchise; syrupy songs fill in for plot, the general tone is sweet enough to form cavities, and essentially everything amounts to one long toy commercial. However, beneath the treacle sits the antithesis of the empathetic heroes. The villain of this story is still hard to shake off, on account of how she hissed her way into the nightmares of children everywhere. For that reason and others, The Care Bears Movie makes for a surprising source of gateway horror.
The term “gateway horror” is commonly used to describe a lot of adult horror that was first experienced as a young age. That usage works fine for most, and it definitely allows for more options in answers, but it would make better sense to say gateway horrors are those pieces of media that don’t quite fit into the genre so neatly, or at all in some cases. They have aspects to them that stick out as eerie and unsettling. Also, it’s those precise parts that can lead to a greater interest in overt horrors. Speaking for myself, The Care Bears Movie, when viewed on repeat at a tender and curious age, was a substantial push in the right direction.
Looking back, the Care Bears were like an overcompensation for everything sad and tragic in the world. Cold War, economic turmoil, and the AIDS epidemic weren’t things that anyone could simply fix, and there was no shielding that reality from children. Even still, the Care Bears were there to help carry the burden. These benevolent bears’ mission statement included rescuing and consoling children, especially when the adults weren’t around to do so. And more often than not, grown-ups were absent in the Care Bears universe, either physically or emotionally. That fact is evident in the first film; the namesakes’ latest charges feel abandoned, not only by their parents but the whole world. Kim (