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Aunt Fanny (or Aunt Fan as she was called in the UK version of the film) is a supporting character in Robots. She is voiced by Jennifer Coolidge. Aunt Fanny is a large, red and white colored, snail-like robot with dark blue eyes. Her most notable feature is her enormous backside, which resembles a snail's shell. It is held up by a single wheel and can be used to store things, or even other robots. Her front end is much smaller than her rear; and sports arms and legs just like all the other robots. She wears a very large hat-like object on her head, which is adorned with numerous decorations. Aunt Fanny is a kindly, generous, motherly figure toward broken, "outmoded" robots. She took in Fender, Piper, Crank, Lug, and Diesel when they had nowhere else to go, allowing them to stay in her boarding house, making them her possible adoptive sons and daughter or adoptive nephews and niece. She instantly takes a liking to Rodney, and comes to say goodbye to him when he wants to return to Rivet Town. She is known for being "a little artsy-fartsy," a reference to how prone she is to farting. In a contest among the "Rusties," wherein they made arm farts, she revealed her gassiness, as she actually farted, killing a nearby streetlamp.

Aunt Fanny

Aunt Fanny
for Aunt Fanny in Alvin's Big Forest Movie (2000)
Suggested by thomasthelogosguy

Alvin's Big Forest Movie is a 2000 American animated comedy film produced by Columbia Pictures and 20th Century Fox. It is the first CGI feature-length film. The film was directed by Ralph Zondag and Eric Leighton, co-directed by Rob Minkoff, and produced by Clint Goldman and Beau Flynn, from a screenplay written by Walon Green, John Harrison, Robert Nelson Jacobs, Thom Enriquez, and Ralph Zondag, and a story conceived by John Lasseter, Stanton, and Joe Ranft. It stars the voices of Justin Long, Christina Applegate, Kristen Bone, Angela Lansbury, and James Woods. In the film, a misfit chipmunk named Alvin, looks for "tough warriors" to save his animal colony from a protection racket run by a gang of evil animals. However, the "warriors" he brings back were a troupe of Circus Animals. The film's plot was initially inspired by Aesop's fable, "The Ant and the Grasshopper."
