You don't need to wait for a prince to figure things out. You can use a hairbrush and a lot of determination. 5. The Tower is Cardboard Gold As a parent, I love the low-budget charm. The CBeebies set designers are geniuses. The tower looks like a brilliant Blue Peter project made of corrugated card and craft paint. It encourages imagination. After watching, my daughter built a "tower" out of sofa cushions and used skipping ropes as hair.
The CBeebies Rapunzel songbook is surprisingly good. It avoids the high-pitched screech of some kids' tunes and opts for proper show tunes. It’s the perfect length for a "cleaning up toys" soundtrack. This is my favourite part. In the old versions, Rapunzel is quite passive (waiting to be rescued). Not here. The CBeebies Rapunzel is curious, inventive, and a little bit cheeky. She doesn't just sit in the tower brushing her hair; she figures out how to lower a pulley system for grocery delivery. She teaches the Prince (who is usually a bit bumbling) how to actually climb. rapunzel cbeebies
But there is one adaptation that I think deserves a standing ovation in the living room: . You don't need to wait for a prince to figure things out
2 to 6 years. Watch it for: The villain’s lettuce-based meltdown. Skip it if: You hate having songs stuck in your head for 48 hours. The Tower is Cardboard Gold As a parent,
It proves you don't need CGI dragons to have a magical adventure. Should you watch it? Absolutely. Put it on for a rainy Tuesday afternoon.