Garfield (Bill Murray) is back and this time he and his canine sidekick Odie follow their owner, Jon Arbuckle (Breckin Meyer), to England, the U.K. may never recover, as Garfield is mistaken for a look-alike, regal cat w...
Garfield (Bill Murray) is back and this time he and his canine sidekick Odie follow their owner, Jon Arbuckle (Breckin Meyer), to England, the U.K. may never recover, as Garfield is mistaken for a look-alike, regal cat w...
The film's central conflict revolves around mistaken identity and the defeat of an individually greedy villain, focusing on apolitical themes of friendship and the restoration of a benevolent status quo rather than promoting any specific political ideology.
The movie features traditional casting without explicit race or gender swaps for established roles. Its narrative maintains a neutral to positive framing of traditional identities, and DEI themes are not central or explicitly critiqued within the storyline.
Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The film's plot centers on a comedic animal adventure, and therefore, there is no portrayal to evaluate as positive, negative, or neutral.
The film is a family comedy centered on animal antics rather than physical combat. No female characters, human or animal, are depicted engaging in or winning direct physical fights against male opponents using skill, strength, or martial arts.
The film features established characters like Garfield, Jon, Odie, and Liz, all of whom retain their canonical genders from the comic strip. New characters introduced for the movie do not constitute gender swaps.
The film features animal characters (cats) and human characters (Jon Arbuckle, Liz Wilson) whose on-screen portrayals align with their established races from the original comic strip and previous adaptations. No character canonically established as one race is depicted as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources