Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
The offbeat escapades of unlikely best friends Bill, a rambunctious duck, and Aldo, an alligator from Swampwood, where ducks are usually lunch, not pals.
The offbeat escapades of unlikely best friends Bill, a rambunctious duck, and Aldo, an alligator from Swampwood, where ducks are usually lunch, not pals.
The film's central theme of a reversed predator-prey dynamic, explored through dark comedy, lacks an inherent political valence and does not champion any specific ideological solution, leading to a neutral rating.
As an animated short film featuring anthropomorphic ducks, 'Sitting Ducks' does not include human characters, making the direct application of human-centric diversity, equity, and inclusion criteria for casting and narrative framing largely inapplicable. The film neither explicitly engages with DEI themes nor critiques traditional human identities.
The animated television series 'Sitting Ducks' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The show's narrative centers on the friendship between a duck and an alligator, focusing on general themes suitable for a young audience without incorporating queer identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The animated series "Sitting Ducks" is based on Michael Bedard's children's books. The main characters, Bill the duck and Aldo the alligator, retain their established male genders from the original source material in the show. No instances of gender swaps for established characters are identified.
The animated series "Sitting Ducks" features anthropomorphic animal characters, primarily ducks and an alligator. As these characters are not human, the concept of a "race swap" as defined does not apply to them.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources