A magical meteor falls in Adventure City and gives the PAW Patrol superpowers, transforming them into the Mighty Pups. But they face their most powerful challenge when Humdinger teams up with a mad scientist to steal the...
A magical meteor falls in Adventure City and gives the PAW Patrol superpowers, transforming them into the Mighty Pups. But they face their most powerful challenge when Humdinger teams up with a mad scientist to steal the...
The film's narrative explicitly champions private corporate entities and technology as the primary solutions to societal problems, reinforcing a pro-police, technocratic state narrative and neoliberal capitalist ideology.
The movie features a strong and intentional presence of diversity, evident in its multiracial voice cast and the significant roles given to women of color. This commitment to diverse representation is a key characteristic, though the narrative itself does not explicitly critique traditional identities or center DEI themes beyond the casting.
PAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie contains no explicit LGBTQ+ representation or themes. The narrative centers on heroism and teamwork among its ensemble of pups, without addressing sexual orientation or gender identity. Consequently, the film receives an N/A rating for its portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements, as there are none present to evaluate.
The film features female characters like Skye and Liberty who gain superpowers and use them to confront male opponents. However, their victories are achieved through the direct application of these superpowers, such as super speed, elasticity, or flight-based maneuvers, rather than through skill-based hand-to-hand combat or martial arts.
The film features established characters from the PAW Patrol franchise, all of whom maintain their canonical genders. New characters introduced in the movie do not constitute gender swaps.
The primary characters are anthropomorphic animals, for whom the concept of human race does not apply. Human characters maintain their established appearances from previous installments, with no instances of a character canonically established as one race being portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources