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The Angry Birds' anger is rooted in Aristotelian philosophy, claims director

In fairness, the games didn't give them much to go on

Christopher Hooton
Friday 06 May 2016 05:45 EDT
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When a Quora user asked ‘What are the Angry Birds angry about and why are they so angry?’ this week, they probably weren’t expecting such a thorough answer.

The Angry Birds Movie directors Clay Kaytis and Fergal Reilly provided an answer, first giving a little detail on the plot of the video game adaptation that I for one still can’t believe is actually happening.

“The Birds as a community actually aren’t angry in the beginning,” they write. “They are comically naive, having lived their whole lives on Bird Island in peace, protected by the legendary Mighty Eagle, a hero no one has seen for decades. When the Pigs show up and steal the Birds’ eggs, there’s plenty to be angry about.”

The directors then tried to add a little more nuance to the Birds’ anger, linking them, surely for the first time ever, to the thought of Greek philosopher Aristotle.

“It was fun to explore the idea that anger isn’t necessarily a negative emotion,” they explain. “Like Aristotle said, “Anybody can become angry - that is easy, but to be angry with the right person and to the right degree and at the right time and for the right purpose, and in the right way - that is not within everybody's power and is not easy.”

The correct answer to this question is of course that there’s no reason and the game/movie is little more than a hastily-thrown together cash cow, but kudos to the directors for making the best use of their scant source material.

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