Bob the Builder: Race to the Finish (2008)

Overview
When Sunflower Valley needs a new sports stadium, there's only one team for the job. It's Bob the Builder and his Can-Do Crew! Can Bob build it? With the help of his new friends, Gripper and Grabber - YES, HE CAN! Join Bob, Wendy, and the Can-Do Crew as they race to the finish line in their biggest construction job yet. See how teamwork and fun go hand-in-hand in this colossal building adventure.
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Bias Dimensions
Overview
When Sunflower Valley needs a new sports stadium, there's only one team for the job. It's Bob the Builder and his Can-Do Crew! Can Bob build it? With the help of his new friends, Gripper and Grabber - YES, HE CAN! Join Bob, Wendy, and the Can-Do Crew as they race to the finish line in their biggest construction job yet. See how teamwork and fun go hand-in-hand in this colossal building adventure.
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
The film's focus on universal themes like teamwork, problem-solving, and friendly competition in a children's context prevents it from aligning with any specific political ideology.
The movie features traditional casting for its human characters, without incorporating explicit race or gender swaps of established roles. The narrative maintains a neutral and positive framing of its characters and their roles, without engaging in critical portrayals of traditional identities or making DEI themes central to the storyline.
Secondary
The film "Bob the Builder: Race to the Finish" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The story focuses on construction, teamwork, and a race, without incorporating elements related to queer identity or experiences.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This film is a direct-to-video installment of the 'Bob the Builder' franchise. All established characters, such as Bob, Wendy, Scoop, and Dizzy, maintain their canonical genders from previous iterations. No existing characters were portrayed with a different gender.
The film is an installment of the long-running animated series. All established human characters, such as Bob and Wendy, maintain their original racial depictions from the source material. No instances of a character canonically established as one race being portrayed as a different race were identified.
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