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Who Are You, Charlie Brown?

2021

Animation / Biography / Documentary

3
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh89%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright87%
IMDb Rating7.210505

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Kevin Smith Photo
Kevin Smith as Self
Noah Schnapp Photo
Noah Schnapp as Self
Lupita Nyong'o Photo
Lupita Nyong'o as Self - Narrator
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
502.9 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
12 hr 54 min
P/S 1 / 2
1.01 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
12 hr 54 min
P/S 2 / 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by southdavid5 / 10

Checkpoint Charlie

In keeping up my record of watching all the movies on Apple TV, I landed on "Who Are You, Charlie Brown?" a documentary about Peanuts and its creator, Charles Schulz. Generally, I thought it was fine, but unlike other documentaries I couldn't overcome my disinterest in the subject matter to make the viewing worthwhile.

Charlie Brown (Tyler James Nathan) is asked to produce a piece of homework, a 500-word essay on "who he is". Sent into an introspective funk, he asks his friends and schoolmates what they think of him. These animated sections are intercut with a documentary about Charles Schulz, utilising archive footage, with new talking head style interviews with his friends, family and pop culture fans to explore who he was.

The biggest issue I had with this documentary was me. I know who the Peanuts characters are, and I've maybe seen that Halloween animated film a few times - but as Kevin Smith says "Peanuts is ingrained into American Pop culture" and I'm not American. What I'm saying is, I didn't approach this with much in built affection for his creation and, capable as though this documentary was, it never really inspired much within me.

It's well made though. The conceit works, with the looping narrative of Charlie Brown exploring who he is, mixed in with the information we get about his creator. The talking heads are a mixed bag, some seeming like Peanuts had a genuine effect on their life and others, who I don't recognise, who seem prepared to say that they liked it and not much else. The insights from the family are best, and the footage of Schulz himself. It's quite emotional when he talks about giving up the strip as he's dying of colon cancer.

It's an affectionate look at his life and work, mixed in with a new cartoon. Apart from the odd moment though, it's not honest or surprising enough to stick with me or convert me to an uberfan.

Reviewed by beeblebrox-25 / 10

Who was Charles Schulz? He was a devout Christian

A Charlie Brown Christmas was a rarity, even for 60s era television. It was a holiday special that actually communicated what Christmas was really about. Despite what the network said - "No Bible!", Schulz fought for Linus to tell the Story of the birth of Jesus. And they relented. It remains one of the most watched holiday specials of all time.

Charles Shultz' comics exuded his Christian faith. His characters were from all backgrounds because Shultz considered all of us to be God's children. He would often use Linus to explain to Charlie what the larger meaning of life was.

Did this documentary mention to the the viewer about Schulz' faith? Did it even bother to show a clip of Linus telling the Christmas story?

Nope.

Instead, we get both overt and covert woke messaging. I'm surprised his widow had anything to do with this.

Still, if you accept that Apple was never going to honor Schulz' faith in this documentary, he was honored in other ways. Just be aware as you watch that Charles Schulz is who he was because of his Christian beliefs.

Reviewed by steven5122 / 10

Ruined by Wokeism

They went out of their way to push an agenda. Truly cringeworthy at times.

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