Equestria's divided. But a bright-eyed hero believes Earth Ponies, Pegasi and Unicorns should be pals — and, hoof to heart, she’s determined to prove it.
Equestria's divided. But a bright-eyed hero believes Earth Ponies, Pegasi and Unicorns should be pals — and, hoof to heart, she’s determined to prove it.
The film's central thesis explicitly promotes overcoming systemic prejudice and fear between different groups to achieve unity and restore societal harmony, aligning with progressive ideals of diversity and inclusion.
The film features a diverse voice cast for its animated pony characters. Its narrative strongly emphasizes themes of unity, acceptance, and overcoming prejudice between different groups, portraying division negatively and promoting inclusion as a central message.
The film includes a very brief, incidental background depiction of a same-sex couple, which is not central to the plot or character arcs. The overall portrayal is neutral, as LGBTQ+ themes are not a focus of the narrative and neither uplift nor denigrate queer identity.
The film does not feature any scenes where a female character engages in and wins direct physical combat against one or more male opponents. The conflict resolution in the movie primarily involves magic, persuasion, and evasion, rather than close-quarters brawling.
The film introduces an entirely new cast of characters for a new generation of My Little Pony. No established legacy characters from previous installments are present and portrayed with a different gender.
The film features anthropomorphic pony characters, not human characters. The concept of a 'race swap,' which applies to human racial categories, is not applicable to these characters.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources