I am going to be a father and am making a jellyfin setup for my child. I want to start early to make a good collection of movies and shows. So I am interested in knowing what other people experienced as positive influences in their lives.

Edit: English and Norwegian is fine, but I can always get dubbed versions of other languages. We will be speaking English and Norwegian with our child from birth. But want to introduce our child to many types of cultures, religions etc.

Edit 2: Thanks so much for so many great responses. Some of you must have spent quite some time compiling the list. Truly appreciate that ♥️

  • Stowaway@midwest.social
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    Miyazaki/Studio Ghibli For Younger Kids:

    • My Neighbor Totoro
    • Ponyo
    • Spirited Away
    • The Secret World of Arietty
    • Kiki’s Delivery Service
    • Pom Poko

    For maybe when they’re getting older?

    • Howl’s Moving Castle
    • The Wind Risees
    • Castle In The Sky
    • Princess Mononoke
    • Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind

    Some other decent ones for kids of various ages:

    Animated/Claymation

    Series:

    • Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog
    • Alvin & The Chipmunks
    • Captain Planet and the Planeteers
    • Ducktales
    • Gumby
    • Inspector Gadget
    • Rugrats
    • Rescue Rangers
    • Scooby Doo
    • Yogi Bear

    Movies:

    • Alice in Wonderland
    • All Dogs go to Heaven
    • An American Tail
    • An American Tail: Fivel Goes West
    • The Black Cauldron
    • Charlotte’s Web
    • FernGully
    • James and the Giant Peach
    • The Land Before Time
    • The Nightmare Before Christmas
    • Peter Pan
    • Pinochio
    • RobinHood
    • The Rescuers
    • The Rescuers Down Under
    • The Secret of NIMH
    • The Sword in the Stone
    • Thumbelina
    • Wallace and Gromit (All of them are great)

    Live Action Series:

    • Bill Nye The Science Guy
    • Beakmans World

    Movies:

    • Beetlejuice
    • Casper
    • Ernest Goes to School (and all the other ones really)
    • Honey I Shrunk The Kids
    • Hook
    • Jumanji
    • E.T.
    • Edward Scissor Hands
    • Flubber
    • Ghost Busters
    • The Goonies
    • Labyrinth (Creepier vibe than I remember)
    • The Little Rascals
    • Mary Poppins
    • Mr. Mom
    • Mrs. Doubtfire
    • The Never Ending Story
    • Operation Dumbo Drop
    • Patch Adams
    • Sandlot
    • Short Circuit
    • Space Jam
    • Toys
    • Tron
    • We’re back a dinosaur story
    • Who Framed Roger Rabbit (Animated and Live Action)

    Edit: awful formatting… And typos

      • skavj@lemmy.zip
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        I’ve tried finding good episodes to show now and it’s been pretty hard. There are a few smatterings on youtube. The video quality is very low. Niche enough that there aren’t many sources.

        I was also amused to learn that when I was a kid I thought they were just talking like crazy freaks with a weird funny way of talking. As an adult, they’re just new yorkers.

        • katy ✨@piefed.blahaj.zone
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          3 days ago

          there’s a good complete series torrent out there that i got; there’s also a good complete series upload on archive.org too! for both beakman’s world and bobby’s world

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    Sesame Street, Muppets, The Electric Company.

    Completely dated, but these older shows introduced a white kid in whitesville to a completely different world. Plus fun, educational in a way that kids don’t mind.

  • RamRabbit@lemmy.world
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    • The Lion King (original)
    • Mulan (original)
    • Jurassic Park
    • Princess Mononoke
    • Castle in the Sky
    • Spirited Away
    • Forrest Gump
    • Aladdin (original)
    • Men in Black
    • Galaxy Quest
    • Home Alone
    • The Nightmare Before Christmas
    • The Matrix
    • Toy Story
    • Top Gun
    • The Terminator
    • A Charlie Brown Christmas

    • Yu Yu Hakusho
    • Cowboy Bebop
    • Suck_on_my_Presence@lemmy.world
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      Princess Mononoke might be a little dark for an earlier age. There’s some really brutal scenes in it.

      Of course that didn’t stop it from being my favorite from age 8 onward, but still.

      • overload@sopuli.xyz
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        I’m picturing a toddler seeing a soldier get beheaded by an arrow from horseback, looks over at Dad for emotional support, and Dad looks on with an approving grin, comfortable that he’s made the right choice of early childhood films.

        Also, The Matrix/Terminator as a suggestion for a small child is a big lol.

    • AdolfSchmitler@lemmy.world
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      Hell yeah yu yu hakusho is so good!!! So much raw emotion with great story telling and cool fights. I know he’s the bad guy but when younger toguro turns down a ticket to heaven so he can suffer in purgatory cuz he thinks he doesn’t deserve it gets me so hard everytime.

      • cyberwitch@reddthat.com
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        it gets me so hard everytime.

        Phrasing! Hahaha

        Lots of episodes can get a little violent but the first episode is golden for teaching perspective and that the “bad guys/good guys” dichotomy isn’t what it seems, and to be kind to everyone, in a way that is a little easier to digest when they’re little.

    • ZeroHora@lemmy.ml
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      Funny that you point out the originals Disney movies, that made me think, did the remakes made any impact on the younger generation or is too soon to know that?

      • RamRabbit@lemmy.world
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        Man, I really hope those were just forgettable for them. The Lion King live action remake is so damn disappointing. All the emotion, all the storytelling, just gone. It’s a very poor imitation of the original.

        Remakes can be good. The new Dune movies are worlds better than the 70s movie; that is a movie that needed a proper remake. The new ones actually do the books justice.

  • Thymos@discuss.tchncs.de
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    Growing up I really loved the animated series Alfred Jonathan Quack or Alfred Kvakk in Norwegian. It’s about a duck, his farther (I think) is a mole and the antagonist is a nazi-styled crow called Dolf. My favourite episode was about this island they visited which turned out to be the shell of this gigantic turtle.

    Another favourite was The World of David the Gnome. It’s about a gnome who lives in or under a tree and has all sorts of adventures with animals. The books it’s based on are also great, I still have them.

    I don’t know if you can still find these series since they’re pretty old.

  • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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    The Animals of Farthing Wood was a banger show. It’s because of that show that I began drawing as a kid. I love how epic it is and how it comments on deeper themes that are still important today. Among other things, it’s all about how the animals are forced to immigrate to another park after their forest is turned into a highway for humans. That even after the arrive after a horrible migration, their presence isn’t welcome because they disturb the old ways in the new park. How wars break out, friendships and alliances are formed and how everyone has to find a way to coexist and also keep the ever looming presence of humans at bay. It is truly a brilliant show that teaches you so much about life, death, nature and tolerance. And you know, you can also just watch the show as an entertaining epic for kids about animals without looking into all the political stuff, because it never really tries to cram all it’s themes down your throat in the annoying way that a lot of media does nowadays.

    Maybe hold off on showing the little one this show until they are at least kindergarten age. It’s a bit rough sometimes, but it is not damaging.

    Also, congratulations on becoming a dad! Glædelig jul ❤️

    EDIT: FRIENDS! I LITERALLY JUST FOUND A REMASTERED VERSION OF THE WHOLE SERIES ON YOUTUBE!

    GO WATCH IT HERE❤️

    • Kamsaa@lemmy.world
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      I was exactly looking for the name of that show in English as it is the one that instantly came to my mind when I saw the post. It’s in no small part thanks to this one, and a couple of others (the magic school bus and once upon a time… life) I decided to do a PhD in animal behaviour.

  • Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    Aaahh!!! Real Monsters

    Angry Beavers

    Hey Arnold

    Rocko’s Modern Life

    Rugrats

    Gullah Gullah Island

    Legends of the Hidden Temple

    Basically mid 90s Nickelodeon defined my childhood, and the media’s only gotten worse from there on out! :p

  • Bosht@lemmy.world
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    Bluey and Mickey Mouse Clubhouse (of not the remake) for kids shows. Bluey isa. Double hitter as it’s great for kids and adults as well. There’s a few tearjerker episodes in there for adults around life and kids growing up, along with just great ideas on how to parent and play. MMCH is great as it doesn’t subscribe to the overly energetic constant cutting camera angles bullshit that’s super addictive and bad for kids. Shows are calm, involve learning and problem solving, and are very much like ‘okay get up and expend some energy, go play’ at the end. Honorable mention to Tumbleleaf. It’s for kids that are a bit older, is a little more weird, but still fun. Art style is cool on it as well. Best of luck building your library and congrats on being a dad!!

  • Good_Slate@lemmy.world
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    Bluey. It’s a really positive modern show , so not really from my childhood but it beats everything else from my childhood.

  • cyberwitch@reddthat.com
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    Do not underestimate silent film! My kiddo loved them as a toddler. Here are some great starters:

    • The Cook (Roscoe Arbuckle)
    • Sherlock Jr (Buster Keaton)
    • Gold Rush (Charlie Chaplin)
    • A Trip to the Moon (Georges Méliès)

    Very engaging with way more visual gags than we usually see nowadays, few title cards, and a chance to talk with your kid about what is happening on screen (Ooh no, Charlie is stuck in the lions cage! How is Buster going to get on that runaway train?)

    And eventually when they’re a little older, getting your kid to sit down with you to watch Scorsese’s Hugo (2011). It is an absolutely magical loveletter to early film, particularly Méliès’ A Trip to the Moon.