After a spot of therapy, Cruella De Vil is released from prison a changed woman. Devoted to dogs and good causes, she is delighted that Chloe, her parole officer, has a dalmatian family and connections with a dog charity...
After a spot of therapy, Cruella De Vil is released from prison a changed woman. Devoted to dogs and good causes, she is delighted that Chloe, her parole officer, has a dalmatian family and connections with a dog charity...
The film is largely apolitical, focusing on the universal themes of animal welfare and the defeat of an individual villain driven by greed, rather than engaging with specific political ideologies or systemic critiques.
The movie features a predominantly white cast with no explicit DEI-driven race or gender swaps of traditional roles. Its narrative is a lighthearted family comedy that does not critique traditional identities, nor does it explicitly incorporate DEI themes.
The film '102 Dalmatians' does not include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Consequently, there is no portrayal to evaluate, leading to an N/A rating for its net impact on LGBTQ+ representation.
The film does not contain scenes where a female character defeats one or more male opponents in direct physical combat. Female characters like Cruella De Vil and Chloe Simon do not engage in or win close-quarters physical fights against men.
The film introduces new main characters and features Cruella De Vil, whose gender remains consistent with prior portrayals. No established character from the source material or previous installments has their gender changed.
The film "102 Dalmatians" primarily features returning characters like Cruella De Vil, who maintains her established race, and new original characters. No established character's race was altered from prior canon.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources