Out-of-place wildlife in media

in the Madagascar movie why would they call it Madagascar there aren't lions, hippos, zebras and giraffes living there
Clearly you've never seen the movie! It explains how all of those animals get there.
and zootopia for just SO MANY REASONS!
What, a movie animal about talking mammals in a human-like society is unrealistic? No, that can't be!
 
Night at the Museum has a tufted capuchin in the Hall of African Mammals, which is even acknowledged as such in the films.

The live-action George of the Jungle films have macaws, toucans, an Asian elephant, orangutans, tigers, water buffalo, and more in an African jungle. The reboot of the cartoon they are based on has ring-tailed lemurs, marmosets, brown bears, giant pandas, tapirs, kangaroos, and more in the same setting.

Happy Feet Two has Magellanic and fairy penguins in Antarctica.

Madagascar shows a hummingbird on the titular island. We also see red-ruffed lemurs as background characters, which are restricted to a small part of northeastern Madagascar… ring-tailed lemurs such as King Julien are found only in the south and southwest.

I could go on…

Night at the Museum also briefly showed big yellow snake that I assume to be Burmese python in the Hall of African Mammals section. Also, the section is home to an ostrich. While certainly African, obviously not a mammal.
 
Me too tbh, at least they got Judy Hopps's earbuds where rabbits' ears actually are and not on the side not touching where the ears aren't and where human ears would be.

So Zootopia did conform to some reality.
Indeed. The rabbit characters are also accurately depicted without paw pads, for once.
 
Another example I thought of: the sci-fi series Zoo has this all over the place. We see gray wolves in Mississippi (not only are wolves extirpated there, it was red wolves that were historically native), an African bush elephant in Patagonia (which the show even acknowledges but never gives an explanation to), and grizzly bears, bison, and polar bears as well as a kinkajou in New Brunswick.
 
I dislike the frequent overuse of sound f/x.

During night scenes in e.g. T.V. plays, a fox is nearly always heard barking, not just once or twice but throughout.

Any time you see a dog, or ducks, they have to bark or quack or whatever, irrespective of what they are actually doing. Goose and duck calls often get confused too.

Appreciate these are 'effects' so deliberately get overused but still feel its not necessary
 
In Heathcliff & the Catillac Cats, the episode, Jungle Vacation, has a kookaburra call in a jungle set in Africa.

Kookaburra calls are abundant in media where the setting is a jungle; regardless of location, given kookaburras originate in Australasia.
 
In Heathcliff & the Catillac Cats, the episode, Jungle Vacation, has a kookaburra call in a jungle set in Africa.

Kookaburra calls are abundant in media where the setting is a jungle; regardless of location, given kookaburras originate in Australasia.
Indeed. Most people just think it’s a monkey chattering.
 
Indeed. Most people just think it’s a monkey chattering.

IMO, the "ooh ooh aah aah" for monkeys that people sometimes say when they walk past monkeys from the zoo (Baby, look at the monkey; they say "ooh ooh ahh ahh") may have stemmed from the classic kookaburra call.

Another animal sfx commonly used for primates are chimpanzees, which fit the African theme better, biogeographically speaking, and that chimps actually live in jungles.

Speaking of jungles, same episode was set in a lush jungle and had savanna animals like ostriches, lions, hyenas (correct me if I am wrong about hyenas not being in jungles), and rhinos (afaik, the rhinos that actually live in jungles are Asian rhinos, especially, for example, the Sumatran and Javan rhinos).
 
IMO, the "ooh ooh aah aah" for monkeys that people sometimes say when they walk past monkeys from the zoo (Baby, look at the monkey; they say "ooh ooh ahh ahh") may have stemmed from the classic kookaburra call.

Another animal sfx commonly used for primates are chimpanzees, which fit the African theme better, biogeographically speaking, and that chimps actually live in jungles.

Someone suggested this very irritating noise, which seems to be used universally by Zoo visitors everywhere, stems from a modern film like the Lion King, but not having seen it I do not know about that.

Chimpanzee noises often double as 'the' classic fx for jungle sounds of monkey 'chattering'. I have even heard it included in advertising sound fx by a zoo that didn't have chimps themselves.
 
Someone suggested this very irritating noise, which seems to be used universally by Zoo visitors everywhere, stems from a modern film like the Lion King, but not having seen it I do not know about that.

Chimpanzee noises often double as 'the' classic fx for jungle sounds of monkey 'chattering'. I have even heard it included in advertising sound fx by a zoo that didn't have chimps themselves.
Ooh ooh aah aah :mad: I've just returned from my local zoo where not a visit can pass without me hearing this. Today's example was as a family walked towards the ape house and the mother said 'We're going to see the monkeys. They say ooh ooh aah aah'. I rolled my eyes very loudly and probably added an OMG. Do none of them notice that orangs and gorillas are normally silent and that the only monkeys at my zoo that make a sound are the Dianas? And occasionally the mangabeys!
 
Back
Top