Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
Doraemon and friends travels into another world via the time machine; where humans and robots are living together. However they soon find out that the Empress of Robot Kingdom was trying to capture robots there and turn them emotionless. As the situation goes tense, our heroes sets out to stop the Empress and her plan.
Doraemon and friends travels into another world via the time machine; where humans and robots are living together. However they soon find out that the Empress of Robot Kingdom was trying to capture robots there and turn them emotionless. As the situation goes tense, our heroes sets out to stop the Empress and her plan.
The film's central conflict and resolution champion universal values such as individuality, emotion, and freedom against tyranny, without explicitly promoting or critiquing specific political ideologies.
The movie features a cast consistent with its Japanese anime origin, presenting characters of East Asian appearance without explicit DEI-driven recasting of traditionally white roles. Its narrative focuses on universal themes of adventure and friendship, without explicitly critiquing traditional identities or centering strong DEI themes.
The film "Doraemon: Nobita and the Robot Kingdom" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Consistent with the franchise's typical content and target audience, the narrative focuses on adventure and friendship without exploring queer identity.
The film does not feature any female characters engaging in direct physical combat where they defeat one or more male opponents through skill, strength, or martial arts. Female characters are present but do not participate in such combat scenarios.
The film features established characters from the Doraemon franchise, such as Doraemon, Nobita, Shizuka, Suneo, and Gian. All these characters maintain their canonically established genders from the source material. New characters introduced in the film do not constitute gender swaps.
This animated Japanese film is part of the long-running Doraemon franchise. The characters, including Nobita and Doraemon, are consistently depicted as Japanese, aligning with their established race in the source manga and previous adaptations. There are no instances of characters being portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources