Babar: The Movie (1989)

Overview
Children's book authors Jean and Laurent de Brunhoff's most beloved elephant comes to the big screen in this animated family tale. Elephant monarch King Babar tells the tale, that unfolds via flashback, of how a much-younger Barbar and his girlfriend Celeste save her village from the pugnacious rhinoceroses that have come to raid it.
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Bias Dimensions
Overview
Children's book authors Jean and Laurent de Brunhoff's most beloved elephant comes to the big screen in this animated family tale. Elephant monarch King Babar tells the tale, that unfolds via flashback, of how a much-younger Barbar and his girlfriend Celeste save her village from the pugnacious rhinoceroses that have come to raid it.
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
The film's central themes of environmental stewardship, benevolent leadership, and community responsibility are presented in a universally appealing children's narrative without explicitly promoting a specific political ideology, leading to a neutral rating.
The film, an animated story featuring anthropomorphic animal characters, does not present human racial or gender identities for evaluation in its casting. Its narrative focuses on universal themes suitable for a children's audience, without engaging in critiques of traditional human identities or explicit DEI themes.
Secondary
Babar: The Movie, a children's animated film, does not include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on the adventures of Babar and his family, presenting a story without any explicit or implicit queer representation.
Babar: The Movie is an animated children's film. While it features female characters like Celeste and Flora, their roles do not involve direct physical combat. The film's conflicts are resolved through adventure, strategy, and cooperation, rather than hand-to-hand fights where female characters defeat male opponents.
All major characters in "Babar: The Movie" retain their established genders from the original book series and prior adaptations. No canonical characters were portrayed as a different gender.
The film features anthropomorphic animal characters, primarily elephants. The concept of human race, as defined for a "race swap," does not apply to these non-human characters.
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