Snoopy, Come Home (1972)

Overview
When Snoopy receives a letter from his original owner Lila, he goes to visit her in the hospital while Charlie Brown and the gang are on the lookout for him. Suddenly, Snoopy feels that he must go live with Lila, but must say goodbye to all his friends. In his adventure to the hospital, he encounters numerous "No Dogs Allowed" signs, an annoying little girl who desires to keep him, and more!
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Bias Dimensions
Overview
When Snoopy receives a letter from his original owner Lila, he goes to visit her in the hospital while Charlie Brown and the gang are on the lookout for him. Suddenly, Snoopy feels that he must go live with Lila, but must say goodbye to all his friends. In his adventure to the hospital, he encounters numerous "No Dogs Allowed" signs, an annoying little girl who desires to keep him, and more!
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
The film is rated as neutral/centrist because its core conflict and resolution revolve around universal, apolitical themes of loyalty, friendship, and belonging, rather than promoting any specific political ideology or engaging in societal critiques.
This animated film from the Peanuts franchise features traditional casting for its core characters, without intentional race or gender swaps. The narrative centers on themes of friendship and loyalty, and does not include explicit DEI themes or critiques of traditional identities.
Secondary
Snoopy, Come Home is an animated musical centered on Snoopy's journey and his relationships with Charlie Brown and his original owner, Lila. The film does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, relationships, or themes within its narrative or character arcs, resulting in no depiction of LGBTQ+ content.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film adapts characters directly from the Peanuts comic strip, maintaining their established genders without alteration. No canonical male or female characters are portrayed as a different gender.
The animated film "Snoopy, Come Home" features characters from the Peanuts comic strip, all of whom are depicted consistently with their established racial portrayals in the source material. No character's race was altered from their original or previously established depiction.
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