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Care Bears

Teddy bears taken to the next level of cute, with pastel colors and symbols on their chest (known as "tummy symbols" or more recently "belly badges"). They live up in the cloud-city of Care-A-Lot and frequently visit Earth to help out kids who are feeling down. The Bears have names relating to their specialty - Good Luck Bear, Friend Bear, and so forth. Later, "Care Bear Cousins" representing other animals were introduced (Brave Heart Lion, Cozy Heart Penguin, etc.); they live in the Forest of Feelings about halfway between Earth and Care-A-Lot.

Originating on greeting cards in 1981, these little guys and gals were a hit right out of the gate when Kenner launched a toy line two years later. They had a lot of animated screentime for the rest of the decade: two specials, a TV series, and three theatrical films over 1985-87: The Care Bears Movie, Care Bears Movie II: A New Generation, and The Care Bears Adventure In Wonderland. A fourth film, Care Bears Nutcracker Suite (1988), was aired as a TV special when the third flopped. The franchise died back through the 90's after a very brief and unsuccessful redesign — Compare My Little Pony. Now they're back with a handful of new direct-to-DVD movies.

In most of the films and cartoons, they are pitted against various "heartless" villains who want to make the world safe for evil, often by removing people's ability to care for others... or to feel emotions at all. The baddies ranged from the Mad Scientist Professor Coldheart in the specials to the Evil Spirit of the first movie to the Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain crew of the later TV episodes (evil wizard No Heart, his niece Shreeky, and henchman Beastly). When the chips are down, that's when the Care Bear Stare comes into play.

They're one of the most spoofed of The Eighties toy lines because of their overly sugary reputation - which is not wholly deserved when one takes some of their villains and plotlines into account. On the other hand, they're still quite popular. At the turn of the millennium, the characters were relaunched with a toy revival and two direct-to-video animated films. In 2007, a redesigned line of the toys arrived along with another DTV film and a Saturday morning series on CBS, Care Bears - Adventures in Care-A-Lot.

Adventures in Care-A-Lot now seems to be out of production, but the character line launched with the Oopsy Does It is continuing with films such as Giving Festival Movie and the upcoming Care Bears to the Rescue Movie.


Tropes named:

  • Care Bear Stare: After a non-fatal attack (and later, also a healing maneuver) typically employed in the series.
  • Grumpy Bear: After a character from the series


Tropes Demonstrated:

  • Agony Beam: The Care Bear Stare functions like one to the Heartless and others who cannot comprehend good.
  • Amazing Technicolor Wildlife
  • Aww, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: In one episode, No Heart banishes Beastly, and Shreeky finds that she misses him. Awww...
    • Then again, the episode gave no reason to believe it was just because Shreeky didn't like doing Beastly's chores.
  • Barefoot Cartoon Animals
    Grizzle: Behold my power suit and quake in your boots.
    Oopsy: But, we don't wear boots.
    Grizzle: Well, look anyway!
  • Beauty Equals Goodness
  • Be Careful What You Wish For: A major theme of the CGI Big Wish Movie. Wish Bear, upset that nobody likes her wishes, wishes for some bears to come to Care-a-Lot who like wishing just as much as she does. She gets her wish, but the new neighbors turn out to like wishing so much that they take away Twinkers, her wishing star, from her.
  • Blooper: As with My Little Pony, this is a series that stars a number of characters who look essentially the same, so animation mistakes run rampant.
    • In Wonderland, the Ermine Cape that Alice and the Princess wear can't decide what shape the ermine trim is, whether it has a collar or not, or even whether it's being worn or not.
  • Butt Monkey: Grumpy Bear — surprised?
  • Captain Ersatz: Dim and Dum from Adventures in Wonderland are blatant copies of Beastly. Dim even has the same voice. The Rat King in the Nutcracker special also shares Beastly's voice and general characterization.
  • Catchphrase: "Why do these things always happen to me?" ~ Grumpy
  • Chariot Race: Hugs and Tugs are told a story about a chariot race. Shreeky and Beastly versus Champ Bear.
  • Cheerful Child: Hugs and Tugs Bear, the cubs.
  • Chekhov's Gun: The key from the first movie. Which had its importance greatly undermined by the fact that it could be duplicated rather easily.
    • You know, that might actually count as a subversion. Not that that makes it make any more sense.
  • Chekhov's Skill: Marble shooting in the second movie.
  • Christmas Episode: A movie, Care Bears Nutcracker Suite.
  • Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: The Cloud Keeper, Professor Coldheart and Frostbite. This is due to DiC losing the rights to the TV series and Nelvana not being able to own DiC's original characters.
  • Circle of Friendship: Care Bares love this move.
  • Clap Your Hands If You Believe: In the second movie, the Bears and Cousins exhort the audience to chant "We care!" along with them to save a girl who made a Heroic Sacrifice. Even the repentant villain Dark Heart breaks down and joins in, and not only is a Disney Death invoked for her, he winds up becoming a nice human boy.
  • Continuity Snarl: Exactly how Care Bears Movie II: A New Generation - and it's an Origin Story - fits in with the first Care Bears Movie as a prime source of tongue-in-cheek Fan Wank. Most likely the first movie is in same continuity as the two 1980's specials and the DiC show, and the second movie/Nelvana series is either an Alternate Continuity.
  • Crying Wolf: Crying swamp monster, actually. Then there was a "real" swamp monster who happened to be Beastly in disguise, and the real real monster wasn't bad.
  • Crystal Dragon Satan: Dark Heart, essentially. Even resorted to Faustial deals.
  • Curtains Match the Window: Dark Heart before his Heel Face Turn.
  • Daddy's Little Villain: Shreeky, No Heart's niece.
  • Deal with the Devil: Christy in the second movie
  • Demoted to Extra: Grumpy's fate during the '00s revival. He pretty much VANISHED from all merchandising from the show (despite being the most iconic of the group) in favor of Bedtime Bear, another blue colored Care Bear.
    • Thankfully, the decision was eventually reversed in Adventures in Care-a-Lot.
    • Many characters got this treatment in the Nelvana series.
  • Detect Evil / Holy Hand Grenade: Care bears are essentially radar paladins.
  • Disembodied Eyebrows: Wingnut, in the new Giving Festival Movie from the Adventures in Care-a-Lot era.
  • The Dragon: Nicholas in the first movie and Christy in the second.
  • Drunk on Milk
  • Easily Thwarted Alien Invasion
  • Everything's Better with Princesses: The Care Bears Adventure in Wonderland
  • Everything's Better with Rainbows: Rainbows are everywhere. They're not just for decoration, they're used as traveling devices, energy and hell, even weapons.
  • Everything's Better With Sparkles: The princess of Wonderland uses sparkles to revive withered plants.
  • Everything's Worse with Bears: Well, at least from the villains' point of view.
  • Evil Is Deathly Cold: Professor Coldheart.
  • Evil Is Hammy: Most of the villains. Probably the most notable example is the Vizier from the Nutcracker special, who is fond of SHOUTING OUT EVERY LINE! Which are then commonly followed up with a "MUAHAHAHAHAHAHA!"
    • If you don't think the Evil Spirit counts, perhaps you need a LESSON on what Hammy is. A LESSON you really need. A LESSON FOR YOU!!!
  • Evil Redhead: Dark Heart, in his human form (or any form that has fur/hair).
  • Evil Sorcerer: No Heart.
  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin: Most of the Bears' names in relation to their personalities and talents.
  • Fake Ultimate Hero: Braveheart Lion.
  • Fluffy Cloud Heaven: Care-A-Lot, just not as an afterlife.
  • For the Evulz: Pretty much the only reason almost any villain does anything. Except for Adventures in Care-a-Lot's Grizzle, who simply hates the Care Bears and wishes to take over, or at least be rid of, Care-a-Lot.
    • Another exception is the Wizard of Wonderland from the third movie Care Bears Adventure In Wonderland. His motive is political power (he wants to become the new king of Wonderland).
  • Four-Fingered Hands: Shreeky. Oddly, other human characters, including her uncle No Heart, have all five fingers. Maybe there's a story there.
  • Garden Hose Squirt Surprise: Subverted in the credits to the third movie. Bright Heart Raccoon is watering the flowers when the water stops. It turned out that Lotsa Heart Elephant had her foot on the hose which made the water stop, then she lifts her foot up again, causing the water to flow again. Bright Heart briefly looks in the hose before looking over to see Lotsa Heart walking away casually, just as the water then squirts out of the hose while Bright Heart was holding it away from himself.
  • Getting Smilies Painted On Your Soul: The Care Bear Stare had this effect in the DiC, to somewhat disturbing results. It was toned back into an all purpose weapon against evil in the Nelvana series before returning to its roots in Adventures In Care-A-Lot.
  • Glad I Thought of It: Shreeky did this with Beastly practically Once per Episode.
  • Good Feels Good: Initially played straight with Beastly's Heel Face Turn, then subverted. He runs back to Shreeky at the end of the episode because he can't stand the taste of diabetes being a Care Bear brings.
  • Green Lantern Ring: The Care Bear Stare can generate energy constructs, generate light, fabricate items, act as a prosaic energy blast, brainwash people into caring, free people from brainwashing, damage intangible entities, and shove objects around telekinetically, among other things.
  • Hair of Gold: The princess of Wonderland.
  • Harmless Villain: Most of the villains who aren't this from the beginning degrade into one over time.
  • The Hat Makes the Man: The Mad Hatter's hats from Adventure in Wonderland.
  • Hate Plague: Both movies 1 & 2.
  • Heart Is an Awesome Power: In the end, everything can be solved with a Care Bear Stare or a quick pep talk.
  • Heavy Sleeper: Bedtime Bear in Adventures in Care-a-Lot. Wakes up, mumbles a short sentence, drops back off to sleep.
  • Heel Face Turn: Dark Heart, in the second movie. Somewhat ironically, given that, aside from the evil book spirit from the first movie, he was arguably the franchise's most dangerous villain.
  • Hold Up Your Score
  • An Ice Person: Professor Coldheart.
  • I Just Want to Be Special: The defining characteristic of Alice in The Care Bears Adventures in Wonderland.
  • Informed Flaw: Cheer Bear in the Nelvana series referred to as "fat" sometimes, in spite of being the same size as everyone else.
  • I Would Say If I Could Say
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Grumpy Bear.
  • Large Ham: The voice actors and actresses playing the villains had a lot of fun.
  • Licensed Games:
    • Averted in the 80s: One was planned for the Atari 2600, but was scrapped when the great crash came around.
    • For the 2000s revival: One for the Game Boy Advance and One for the V-Tech V-Smile. And three for PC/Macs.
    • For the 2007 redesign: One for the V-Tech V-Smile Baby Infant Development System.
  • Lighter and Softer: Adventures In Care-A-Lot manages to be this, even compared to the older cartoons.
  • Loads and Loads of Characters: Almost inevitable, given how many different versions there have been
  • Love Freak
  • Love Redeems: Or caring redeems, but Dark Heart became Cristy's friend in the second movie, and he felt so bad about nearly killing her, that it drove the evil out of him.
  • Make a Wish: In one episode, Grumpy gets an eight-leaf clover that can grant him three wishes.
  • Make Me Wanna Shout: In the TV series, Shreeky's, well, shrieks, can be heard from a mile away and injure people. In one instance, a Care Bear attempts to record her scream, and the tape recorder explodes.
  • Merchandise Driven: The first two films introduced new or revamped characters in conjunction with their toy line debuts: the Cousins in the first, and the whole gang's baby selves in the second.
    • There are plush toys for bears from Adventures in Care-a-Lot that had maybe two lines on the show at most, if they even got to speak at all.
  • Minion with an F in Evil: Beastly from the series; the similar Tweedles from the third movie.
  • Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant: Songfellow Strum, at least for the viewer.
  • Nobody Poops: Well, of course, but Adventure in Wonderland actually goes so far as to show us the inside of Grumpy Bear's bathroom, which has everything you would expect except for a toilet. No wonder he's so cranky.
    • Even in the second movie's "I Care For You" song, all the diapers they changed seemed perfectly clean.
    • He's a bear. He craps in the woods.
      • Except there doesn't seem to be any woods nearby, either. Does he have to sail all the way to the Forest of Feelings to relieve himself?
  • The One Who Wears Shoes: Brightheart Raccoon, in the Nelvana series.
  • One-Winged Angel: In Care Bears 2: The Next Generation, Dark Heart turns into a big ol' heap of Super Smoke.
  • Padding: The first sequel had a musical number at the end that was pretty much just there to make sure it fulfilled the bare minimum for screentime. The song itself was over six minutes long and over half of it consisted of endlessly-repeated chorus (obstensibly to cover the end credits).
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: When Mr. Beastly wanted to flimflam the Care Bears, he would resort to this. It worked every time, even when it was only a pair of Groucho Glasses.
  • Pimped Out Dress: The Princess of Wonderland has quite a few of course, so does the queen.
  • Portrait Painting Peephole: Frostbite does this to spy on the Care Bears in the "Freeze Machine" special.
  • The Power of Friendship: Yup.
  • The Power of Love: Uh-huh.
  • The Power of Rock: That one too. (As an aside, have you noticed that these "Power Of" Tropes seem to be the Holy Trinity for 80's cartoons?)
  • Princess Classic: In Wonderland, a princess is so pure, there's a test for being a "true princess".
  • Princesses Prefer Pink: Again, the Wonderland princess, which rounds out her princess cliches.
  • Princesses Rule: Princess Starglo, who is the "mother of all stars", yet is not a queen.
  • Quirky Miniboss Squad: Professor Coldheart, Frostbite, and Auntie Freeze. Then later, Shreeky and Beastly, who also serve as a two-person Terrible Trio.
  • Rampage From A Nail: Adventure In Wonderland has the Jabberwocky, who's in a state of crankiness due to a thorn stuck in his paw. With the combined effort of everyone, the thorn is removed, inciting the Jabberwocky's Heel Face Turn.
  • Real Dreams Are Weirder: In the Adventures in Care-a-Lot TV series, all the Care Bears share a dreamspace where they tend to have rather mundane dreams (where they do the same things they tend to do in their waking lives), so it was rather refreshing to see the bears having more dream-like dreams in the Share Bear Shines movie.
  • Recycled IN SPACE!: One of the oddest examples this side of "Fonzie and the Happy Days Gang". The final season of the original "Care Bears Family" cartoon featured two spinoffs. One was a Recycled IN SPACE Star Trek parody. The other was a Recycled In Prehistoria Clan of the Cave Bear parody. This, friends, is what a Dork Age looks like and the cartoon was canceled soon after.
  • Redemption Demotion: Dark Heart loses all his powers and becomes a normal human when he turns good.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: Dark Heart in human form. Them turning normal is the first sign that he's turned into a real human.
  • The Renaissance Age of Animation
  • Ridiculympics: One episode involves the Care-A-Lot Games, consisting of such events as the piggyback race, limbo, the egg spoon race, and paddle ball. Much hilarity ensues when Mr. Beastly tries to cheat at every single event he participates in (his screwup with the paddle ball stops just short of destroying the entire stadium).
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: The Evil Spirit in the first film.
  • Sealed Good in a Can: The second film.
  • Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism: Take a good guess on which side this show lies on.
  • Standardized Leader: Tenderheart Bear doesn't have much in terms of personality, does he?
  • The Stars Are Going Out: Princess Starglo turns them all off in Share Bear Shines Movie because without people wishing on stars and believing in her, they just don't have any power, anymore.
  • Sugar Bowl: They live on clouds in an ever happy and sunny world.
  • Super Speed: Swiftheart's power.
  • Swiss Army Tears: They save Wish Bear from (basically) brainwashing in one episode.
  • Tertiary Sexual Characteristics: Girls are usually pink or purple.
  • That Makes Me Feel Angry: Somewhat justified because the Care Bears are all about getting people to "share their feelings." It's heavily Flanderized in Adventures In Care-A-Lot, though, where the Bears (particularly Share) constantly inform each other just what emotion they're feeling at the time.
  • Theme Music Power-Up: The Giving Festival Movie - "Care Power On"
  • The Theme Park Version: The Care Bears Adventure in Wonderland does this for Wonderland.
  • Thing-O-Meter: The Caring Meter, as if it could be anything else.
  • Tome of Eldritch Lore: In the first movie, and it was alive.
  • Verbal Tic: In the Nelvana series, Champ Bear calls everyone "sports fan" no matter what the context.
  • Vile Villain, Saccharine Show: The DiC and Nelvana TV series and movies are these.
  • Villainous Friendship : Dark Heart and Christy in the second movie.
  • Villain Song: In the first TV special: "Allow me to introduce myself!/They call me Professor Coldheart..."
    • And from the Adventures in Care-a-Lot movie Oopsy Does It, "Grizzle's Bad."
    • "When I'm the King of Wonderland" in the Wonderland movie.
  • Wasn't That Fun?: In one segment from the "Giving Festival" movie, Oopsy and Wingnut help Trueheart get over her fear of rollercoasters. Part of their method involves riding the ferris wheel first, but they accidentally set the wheel to super fast, sending the wheel spinning at at a terrifying pace. Once they get it stopped, Trueheart seems to be in shock, until she says, "That. Was. AWESOME!" Later, after Trueheart gets over her fear of the Funderbolt, she completely embodies this trope, insisting on continuing to ride after the others have been tired out from riding twenty times.
  • What Measure Is a Non-Human?: Strangely applied in the second film — though it leads to a convenient Heel Face Turn.
  • Zombie Apocalypse: Adventures in Care-a-Lot has one when a Love Potion goes wrong, turning the other Care Bears into creepy "love zombies" bent on apparently hugging Oopsy to death.

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alternative title(s): The Care Bears
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