Welcome to Hotel Transylvania, Dracula's lavish five-stake resort, where monsters and their families can live it up and no humans are allowed. One special weekend, Dracula has invited all his best friends to celebrate his beloved daughter Mavis's 118th birthday. For Dracula catering to all of these legendary monsters is no problem but the party really starts when one ordinary guy stumbles into the hotel and changes everything!
Welcome to Hotel Transylvania, Dracula's lavish five-stake resort, where monsters and their families can live it up and no humans are allowed. One special weekend, Dracula has invited all his best friends to celebrate his beloved daughter Mavis's 118th birthday. For Dracula catering to all of these legendary monsters is no problem but the party really starts when one ordinary guy stumbles into the hotel and changes everything!
The film's central conflict revolves around overcoming prejudice and fear between humans and monsters, advocating for acceptance and intergroup harmony, which aligns with progressive values of diversity and inclusion.
The movie features visible diversity in its voice cast, including prominent roles voiced by actors of color. Its narrative promotes themes of acceptance and overcoming prejudice, framed through the relationship between monsters and humans, rather than explicitly critiquing traditional human identities.
Hotel Transylvania does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, themes, or relationships. The narrative centers on heterosexual romance and the acceptance between monsters and humans, leading to a determination of N/A for LGBTQ+ portrayal.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film features classic monster characters (Dracula, Frankenstein, Mummy, Werewolf, Invisible Man) who retain their historically established male genders. New characters introduced in the film do not have prior canonical genders to swap. No instances of gender swapping were identified.
The film features classic monsters whose 'race' is not canonically defined as human in a way that would allow for a race swap. Voice actors' races do not alter the monster characters' established depictions.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources