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A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and other

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A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and other

Postby muy_thaiguy on Fri Sep 19, 2014 8:18 pm

English speaking but non-North American countries. Do animated films and TV shows from the states keep the original voice actors, or are they redone by that respective country's voice actors? Just been curious about this for awhile.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby BigBallinStalin on Fri Sep 19, 2014 10:25 pm

No, not that I've noticed whilst abroad. The American culture remains dominant.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby muy_thaiguy on Sat Sep 20, 2014 12:18 am

Okay, just something I've been curious about.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby mrswdk on Sat Sep 20, 2014 3:13 am

The only real difference is that they change all the commercials to children's toys and fast food, because in most other countries cartoons are for children.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby chang50 on Sat Sep 20, 2014 5:33 am

The thought has just occurred to me..do Americans dub foreign programmes with American English?
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby notyou2 on Sat Sep 20, 2014 8:45 am

I watch US cartoons like Simpsons, Family Guy, etc in French because its funny to hear their voices in French even though I understand very little.

Then we have Acadieman who speaks chiac which is a local dialect mix of English and French

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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby jonesthecurl on Sat Sep 20, 2014 1:07 pm

chang50 wrote:The thought has just occurred to me..do Americans dub foreign programmes with American English?


Yes. Even Bob the Builder and Thomas the Tank Engine.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby 2dimes on Sun Sep 21, 2014 7:23 am

notyou2 wrote:Then we have Acadieman who speaks chiac which is a local dialect mix of English and French


Mrsdwk @ 3:10? Asks about shipping to china in a poorly done fake Japanese accent.

Right after, "Twa infinity." ~Loses control laughing.~
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby BoganGod on Sun Sep 21, 2014 9:15 am

Original american voice work in both New Zealand and Australian. Though most cartoons are also dubbed into maori, maori pokemon episodes are piss funny! Sometimes(and not often enough) there are subtitles especially if an american regional accent is being used. A lot of words differ between merican and english.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby jonesthecurl on Sun Sep 21, 2014 11:29 am

Me talking to a guy in Boston
ME: we pronounce "Oregano" Orry- Garno, no Orreg-anno.
LOCAL: Interesting.
ME: And we pronounce "Basil" Bah-zil, not Bay-zil.
LOCAL How do you pronounce "Cilantro"?
ME: "Coriander leaf".
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby Vinyl-Taliban on Tue Sep 23, 2014 12:46 pm

muy_thaiguy wrote:English speaking but non-North American countries. Do animated films and TV shows from the states keep the original voice actors, or are they redone by that respective country's voice actors? Just been curious about this for awhile.


This is probably the funniest question I've read in a long time.

I know that there are lots of British sitcoms on in the US - they're not dubbed, so why do you think it would happen the other way round?
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby jonesthecurl on Tue Sep 23, 2014 1:56 pm

Vinyl-Taliban wrote:
muy_thaiguy wrote:English speaking but non-North American countries. Do animated films and TV shows from the states keep the original voice actors, or are they redone by that respective country's voice actors? Just been curious about this for awhile.


This is probably the funniest question I've read in a long time.

I know that there are lots of British sitcoms on in the US - they're not dubbed, so why do you think it would happen the other way round?


He's asking about animated stuff, and yes it does happen in the US.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby tzor on Tue Sep 23, 2014 2:46 pm

jonesthecurl wrote:He's asking about animated stuff, and yes it does happen in the US.


It does?

Please don't tell me they dubbed Wallace and Gromit! :o
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby jonesthecurl on Tue Sep 23, 2014 2:51 pm

I haven't seen that here. But They dubbed over Ringo Starr for Thomas the Tank Engine, and Martin Clunes for Kipper the Dog. Hell, they dubbed over Attenborough for one of the BBC nature programs.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby tzor on Tue Sep 23, 2014 5:35 pm

jonesthecurl wrote:I haven't seen that here. But They dubbed over Ringo Starr for Thomas the Tank Engine, and Martin Clunes for Kipper the Dog. Hell, they dubbed over Attenborough for one of the BBC nature programs.


Well I definitely object to dubbing over all three of these fine English Speakers.

I remember how silly it was once when they put English Subtitles under Jacques Cousteau's English.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby Dukasaur on Fri Sep 26, 2014 7:11 am

jonesthecurl wrote:I haven't seen that here. But They dubbed over Ringo Starr for Thomas the Tank Engine, and Martin Clunes for Kipper the Dog. Hell, they dubbed over Attenborough for one of the BBC nature programs.

That makes no sense. Ringo Starr is for all intents and purposes an American now.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby Razorvich on Fri Sep 26, 2014 7:32 am

here in Australia its mostly the adds that have been redone.
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Re: A quick question for the Brits, Aussies, Irish, and othe

Postby tzor on Fri Sep 26, 2014 10:21 am

Dukasaur wrote:That makes no sense. Ringo Starr is for all intents and purposes an American now.


It makes even less sense when you realize that British accents (from former British citizens) have been heard on both sides of the news channels these days. Besides, Ringo's voice and cadence is wonderful, and beloved by children everywhere.
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