Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
When the Bratz kids are rehearsing for a school play, a talking frog transports them into their fairy tale book, where Jade must be Snow White, Sasha must be Red Riding Hood, Cloe must be Rapunzel, and Yasmin must be Cinderella.
When the Bratz kids are rehearsing for a school play, a talking frog transports them into their fairy tale book, where Jade must be Snow White, Sasha must be Red Riding Hood, Cloe must be Rapunzel, and Yasmin must be Cinderella.
The film focuses on universally positive, apolitical themes such as friendship, imagination, and self-belief within the context of classic fairy tales, without promoting any specific political ideology.
The movie features a cast that is diverse by design, as it stars the established Bratz characters who inherently represent various ethnicities. However, the narrative itself maintains a traditional framing, avoiding explicit critiques of traditional identities or making DEI themes central to its storytelling.
Bratz Kidz: Fairy Tales, an animated children's film, does not include any explicit LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on traditional fairy tale elements and the Bratz characters' adventures, without incorporating queer identities or storylines. Therefore, there is no portrayal to evaluate.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film adapts classic fairy tales, with the Bratz Kidz playing the roles. Male characters portray male fairy tale roles (e.g., Big Bad Wolf, Prince), and female characters portray female fairy tale roles (e.g., Little Red Riding Hood, Princess). There are no instances where a canonically gendered character is portrayed as a different gender.
The film features the established Bratz characters, who maintain their canonical races while portraying various fairy tale roles. The Bratz characters themselves are not race-swapped from their original depictions.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources