Oliver And Company _hot_ «SIMPLE × BUNDLE»

Oliver is no longer a "parish boy" trapped in a system; he is an abandoned kitten in a literal cardboard box on a busy street corner. This shifts the antagonist from a flawed governmental system to the indifference of a modern metropolis Class Displacement:

Critics at the time were mixed. Roger Ebert called it "a lively, funny, sweet-natured cartoon," while others found the tonal whiplash jarring—one minute you’re watching a kitten sing a tear-jerking ballad, the next you’re watching a loan shark try to murder children with a hot-wired car. Oliver and Company

Oliver is no longer a "parish boy" trapped in a system; he is an abandoned kitten in a literal cardboard box on a busy street corner. This shifts the antagonist from a flawed governmental system to the indifference of a modern metropolis Class Displacement:

Critics at the time were mixed. Roger Ebert called it "a lively, funny, sweet-natured cartoon," while others found the tonal whiplash jarring—one minute you’re watching a kitten sing a tear-jerking ballad, the next you’re watching a loan shark try to murder children with a hot-wired car.