"Why?" he croaked. "You could have lived."
In Lady and the Tramp (1955), the difference between stray life and domestic life serves as a class allegory for human dating. The spaghetti scene is iconic not because dogs share food, but because it mimics a human date. The "Tramp" character represents the "bad boy" archetype. The animal exterior allows the storyteller to explore themes of class division and redemption in a softened, palatable way that a human storyline might render too heavy or controversial. www sexy animal videos com top
A screwball comedy about two polyamorous, chaotic event planners who are hired to organize a stuffy, traditional wedding. They are the "bonobos" in a world of "chimpanzees" (territorial, hierarchical, prone to conflict). Their love story is a mess of crossed wires, non-exclusive flings, and genuine tenderness—and they have to figure out if building a "traditional" relationship is possible, or if they need to invent a new blueprint. The "Tramp" character represents the "bad boy" archetype
No discussion of animal romance is complete without analyzing the studio that perfected it: Disney. The studio has spent nearly a century codifying how audiences perceive romantic storylines in the natural world. They are the "bonobos" in a world of