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In the first feature-length animated movie based on the Hanna-Barbera series, Jonny Quest fans get to meet the women behind the adventurous men. Joining scientist Benton Quest, his plucky son Jonny, bodyguard Race Bannon and Jonny's young pal Hadji are Benton's biologist wife Rachel, Race's ex-wife Jade and young 12-year-old Jessie, who harbors a big secret. Throughout, Team Quest battles the evil schemes of modern-day alchemist Dr. Zin, who has cloned himself and created an army of mutant reptiles in the Peruvian rain forest. The clash there results in a tragedy that changes Jonny's life forever - and later leads to a worldwide pursuit of Zin that includes examining rare Leonardo da Vinci documents in Paris, exploring the Roman catacombs and a final confrontation in the Australian outback.
In the first feature-length animated movie based on the Hanna-Barbera series, Jonny Quest fans get to meet the women behind the adventurous men. Joining scientist Benton Quest, his plucky son Jonny, bodyguard Race Bannon and Jonny's young pal Hadji are Benton's biologist wife Rachel, Race's ex-wife Jade and young 12-year-old Jessie, who harbors a big secret. Throughout, Team Quest battles the evil schemes of modern-day alchemist Dr. Zin, who has cloned himself and created an army of mutant reptiles in the Peruvian rain forest. The clash there results in a tragedy that changes Jonny's life forever - and later leads to a worldwide pursuit of Zin that includes examining rare Leonardo da Vinci documents in Paris, exploring the Roman catacombs and a final confrontation in the Australian outback.
The film's central themes of adventure, scientific discovery, and the triumph of good over evil are largely apolitical, focusing on universal heroic tropes rather than specific ideological viewpoints. The narrative champions responsible use of knowledge and courage without promoting a distinct left or right agenda.
The movie includes an established diverse character from its original series, but it does not feature explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. The narrative is a straightforward adventure that does not explicitly critique traditional identities or center DEI themes.
Jonny's Golden Quest, an animated adventure film, does not include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on traditional adventure elements without exploring queer identities or experiences, resulting in no portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements.
The film features Jessie Bannon as a prominent female character involved in the adventure. While she is resourceful and participates in action sequences, there are no scenes depicting her or any other female character defeating one or more male opponents in direct physical combat using skill, strength, or martial arts.
The film features the established male characters from the Jonny Quest franchise, including Jonny, Dr. Quest, Race Bannon, and Hadji, all portrayed with their original genders. No canonical characters were depicted as a different gender.
The animated film features established characters from the Jonny Quest franchise, such as Jonny, Hadji, and Race Bannon. These characters maintain their original racial depictions from prior iterations, with no changes to their race observed in this installment.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources