AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
2,8 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe story of hamsters who get together at meetings to talk about their adventures.The story of hamsters who get together at meetings to talk about their adventures.The story of hamsters who get together at meetings to talk about their adventures.
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória no total
Explorar episódios
Avaliações em destaque
I'm eighteen and I actually like Hamtaro. I can't believe it's been nearly four years since Cartoon Network gave it the boot. It's one of the few Animes I can tolerate because there are no violent monsters killing each other.
Anyway, the show is about a talking hamster named Hamtaro who has an owner named Laura. When Laura's at school, Hamtaro runs from his cage and hangs out with his hamster friends called the "Ham-Hams." They meet at an underground clubhouse and go on numerous adventures. Sometimes, when Laura goes on a trip with her family or friends, the ham-hams may tag along, too.
I believe one of the stronger points on Hamtaro was the dubbing. Many of the voices were good matches for the characters, particularly Boss (Ted Cole), Bijou (Chantal Strand) and Dexter (Samuel Vincent). The only thing I didn't like about the show was the introduction of Stan, Sandy's twin brother. I felt he didn't fit in with everyone else and his flirting made me sick.
I would definitely recommend Hamtaro if you are a parent of someone between the ages of four and ten. If you don't like robots or monsters battling their brains out on other Anime shows, then I also recommend it.
Anyway, the show is about a talking hamster named Hamtaro who has an owner named Laura. When Laura's at school, Hamtaro runs from his cage and hangs out with his hamster friends called the "Ham-Hams." They meet at an underground clubhouse and go on numerous adventures. Sometimes, when Laura goes on a trip with her family or friends, the ham-hams may tag along, too.
I believe one of the stronger points on Hamtaro was the dubbing. Many of the voices were good matches for the characters, particularly Boss (Ted Cole), Bijou (Chantal Strand) and Dexter (Samuel Vincent). The only thing I didn't like about the show was the introduction of Stan, Sandy's twin brother. I felt he didn't fit in with everyone else and his flirting made me sick.
I would definitely recommend Hamtaro if you are a parent of someone between the ages of four and ten. If you don't like robots or monsters battling their brains out on other Anime shows, then I also recommend it.
The fact that I watched this show in the first place is enough to show how anime deprived I am. After months and months of only DBZ on Toonami, the Cartoon Network got this show. The concept is easy to understand hamsters who meet during the day while their owners are wherever. The concept also shows that this is not a show that will likely attract "Cowboy Be Bop" fans. However despite my original misgivings, I find the show to be absolutely charming. It's more like American cartoons than most anime and doesn't have the rough fighting that is the hallmark of most anime series at least those that make it dubdom in the US. The show will be well liked by little kids though I forsee that hamsters will be one popular Christmas present this year for Hamtaro viewers. I also like that several of the best voice actors found in anime are voicing this show such as Brad Swaile and Ted Cole. Anyone under the age of 8 should love this show and anime fans should enjoy seeing a different style of anime,
"Hamtaro" is a Japanese animated TV series first shown in 2000 and then introduced in the U.S. on the Cartoon Network on June 3, 2002. Focusing on a band of hamsters, it's one of the first Japanese series shown in the U.S. to be aimed at very young children. As such, parents should be more comfortable with it than they've been with the constant fighting and battle action on such other Japanese animated children's favorites as "Pokémon," "Digimon," "Dragon Ball Z" and "Sailor Moon." Children aged seven and up, however, will most certainly prefer the greater excitement found in "Pokémon" et al. That said, "Hamtaro" remains a genuinely charming entry for children aged 2-6 and boasts some very nice design, distinguished by bold lines and bright colors, and simple, efficient animation.
The title character is part of a growing band of "Ham-Hams," pet hamsters in a suburban neighborhood who sneak out of their homes to congregate in the well-furnished underground burrow of Boss, a field hamster who guides them on their adventures. Hamtaro is the pet of Laura, an elementary schoolgirl whose close friend and classmate, Kana, is also a hamster lover and has one of her own, Oxnard. Each episode tends to highlight a problem of Laura's or a project she's undertaking and then have the hamsters replicate it in their own world. When Laura has difficulty figuring out what to give her parents for Christmas, the hamsters endeavor to make sure Santa Claus remembers Boss on Christmas morning. When Laura and Kana have to come up with a piece for the school newspaper, the hamsters decide to start their own newspaper. (They're quite a literate bunch.) The hamsters talk to each other, but are unable to communicate verbally with their owners, except in a dream sequence in one episode where Hamtaro is a knight who comes to rescue Princess Laura from the Wicked Ham Wizard (Boss).
Hamtaro's design closely follows that found in the children's books by Ritsuko Kawai that provided the basis for this series. The hamsters are generally cute and cuddly, somewhat reminiscent of "Pokemon"'s Pikachu, and are differentiated from each other in clever ways. The English dubbing is generally good, although some of the hamsters have far-fetched accents that are not easily explainable. The design of Laura and her friends is different from the books and more typical of anime, resembling more closely the girls in "Cardcaptors." As of this writing, the original books are not available in the U.S. in English, although Japanese language editions can be found.
Shogakukan, the publisher of the books, produced the original series and supervised its English adaptation, maintaining a degree of control often lost to Japanese companies when a series of theirs is adapted for the U.S. market. The key change from the original is the replacement of Japanese signs with English ones in the homes and street scenes, although some Japanese lettering is visible to sharp-eyed viewers throughout.
Anime fans will want to see this out of curiosity, but will probably balk at the straight children's show approach and lack of abstract elements and fantasy touches found in just about all anime series seen in America. Teens and twentysomethings who remember all the "pro-social" Saturday morning TV cartoons of the 1980s (e.g. "The Get-Along Gang," "Pound Puppies," "Smurfs," "Rainbow Brite" et al) may see some resemblances here, although the once overarching insistence on group contentment over individual desire is thankfully downplayed.
The title character is part of a growing band of "Ham-Hams," pet hamsters in a suburban neighborhood who sneak out of their homes to congregate in the well-furnished underground burrow of Boss, a field hamster who guides them on their adventures. Hamtaro is the pet of Laura, an elementary schoolgirl whose close friend and classmate, Kana, is also a hamster lover and has one of her own, Oxnard. Each episode tends to highlight a problem of Laura's or a project she's undertaking and then have the hamsters replicate it in their own world. When Laura has difficulty figuring out what to give her parents for Christmas, the hamsters endeavor to make sure Santa Claus remembers Boss on Christmas morning. When Laura and Kana have to come up with a piece for the school newspaper, the hamsters decide to start their own newspaper. (They're quite a literate bunch.) The hamsters talk to each other, but are unable to communicate verbally with their owners, except in a dream sequence in one episode where Hamtaro is a knight who comes to rescue Princess Laura from the Wicked Ham Wizard (Boss).
Hamtaro's design closely follows that found in the children's books by Ritsuko Kawai that provided the basis for this series. The hamsters are generally cute and cuddly, somewhat reminiscent of "Pokemon"'s Pikachu, and are differentiated from each other in clever ways. The English dubbing is generally good, although some of the hamsters have far-fetched accents that are not easily explainable. The design of Laura and her friends is different from the books and more typical of anime, resembling more closely the girls in "Cardcaptors." As of this writing, the original books are not available in the U.S. in English, although Japanese language editions can be found.
Shogakukan, the publisher of the books, produced the original series and supervised its English adaptation, maintaining a degree of control often lost to Japanese companies when a series of theirs is adapted for the U.S. market. The key change from the original is the replacement of Japanese signs with English ones in the homes and street scenes, although some Japanese lettering is visible to sharp-eyed viewers throughout.
Anime fans will want to see this out of curiosity, but will probably balk at the straight children's show approach and lack of abstract elements and fantasy touches found in just about all anime series seen in America. Teens and twentysomethings who remember all the "pro-social" Saturday morning TV cartoons of the 1980s (e.g. "The Get-Along Gang," "Pound Puppies," "Smurfs," "Rainbow Brite" et al) may see some resemblances here, although the once overarching insistence on group contentment over individual desire is thankfully downplayed.
It's a cute show, and it's good. The facts that I'm 22 years old and a show that seems to be aimed at the 8 & Under Club held my interest for more than a minute should attest to that.
I tuned in expecting a show about a world populated by hamsters and other animals alone, and I got a show about hamsters and their owners. Particularly the main hamster, Hamtaro, and his 10-year-old owner Laura. The general gist of the show is that Laura's family has moved to a new town, and her hamster Hamtaro, who's vastly smarter than she knows (she still thinks he can't get out of his cage, silly girl), makes all kinds of new friends.
The world of these hamsters is basically a mimic of the human world; hamsters seem to have the skills and personality quirks of their owners. And every episode, there's a situation that Laura faces that is duplicated in the hamsters' lives - Laura's dad loses his glasses, Hamtaro gets some of his friends to help look for them; Hamtaro follows Laura to school, and gets an idea for a hamster school; Laura gets a crush on a boy, a girl hamster has a crush on a boy hamster. So on and so forth.
In particular, the hamsters seem to view it as their mission to take care of their owners. Just listen to one of the lyrics in the theme song: "If she heads for trouble, we won't let her.: In one episode Hamtaro thinks he made Laura sick by keeping her up all night (she just needed a nap), and another hamster tells him: "Humans mean responsibility. If you can't take care of your human, you shouldn't have her."
Overall, if you're into cute, it's a cool show. I'd still rather have a show that's less about real life in the human aspect (I have to live real life every day, after all, I don't need to see it in cartoons), but this is okay.
Warning: any kid over 8 or 9 will probably be less into this show and more into one of the DB shows or shows of that nature.
I tuned in expecting a show about a world populated by hamsters and other animals alone, and I got a show about hamsters and their owners. Particularly the main hamster, Hamtaro, and his 10-year-old owner Laura. The general gist of the show is that Laura's family has moved to a new town, and her hamster Hamtaro, who's vastly smarter than she knows (she still thinks he can't get out of his cage, silly girl), makes all kinds of new friends.
The world of these hamsters is basically a mimic of the human world; hamsters seem to have the skills and personality quirks of their owners. And every episode, there's a situation that Laura faces that is duplicated in the hamsters' lives - Laura's dad loses his glasses, Hamtaro gets some of his friends to help look for them; Hamtaro follows Laura to school, and gets an idea for a hamster school; Laura gets a crush on a boy, a girl hamster has a crush on a boy hamster. So on and so forth.
In particular, the hamsters seem to view it as their mission to take care of their owners. Just listen to one of the lyrics in the theme song: "If she heads for trouble, we won't let her.: In one episode Hamtaro thinks he made Laura sick by keeping her up all night (she just needed a nap), and another hamster tells him: "Humans mean responsibility. If you can't take care of your human, you shouldn't have her."
Overall, if you're into cute, it's a cool show. I'd still rather have a show that's less about real life in the human aspect (I have to live real life every day, after all, I don't need to see it in cartoons), but this is okay.
Warning: any kid over 8 or 9 will probably be less into this show and more into one of the DB shows or shows of that nature.
I first saw this show on cartoon network and I became hooked on it.It's so adorable, and it's different from a lot of other anime.I mean, who doesn't love little talking hamsters?!? Oh, I heard that the movie was supposed to come out in America in November of 2003, but they canceled it!!!!Why?!? Oh well, maybe it will come out this year.... The animation is great, and it makes up for it's shortness by it's cuteness!!! If you are one of those people who only like fighting anime, then you should look somewhere else. I think that kids and adults of all ages would like this anime. Overall, i give it a 5 out of 5... Actually, I'll give it 10 out of 5!!! You have got to see this show!
Você sabia?
- ConexõesFeatured in AMV Hell 3: The Motion Picture (2005)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How many seasons does Hamtaro have?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Trotting Hamtaro
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente