Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz (2016)

Overview
After capturing the good witch, the villainous King Gnome creates havoc throughout Oz as he needs Dorothy's ruby slippers to take control of the Emerald City. So, it is up to Tom and Jerry to save the land of Oz!
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Bias Dimensions
Overview
After capturing the good witch, the villainous King Gnome creates havoc throughout Oz as he needs Dorothy's ruby slippers to take control of the Emerald City. So, it is up to Tom and Jerry to save the land of Oz!
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
The film's central conflict and resolution are classic fantasy adventure tropes, focusing on universal themes of good versus evil, friendship, and courage, without explicit political messaging.
This animated film, a sequel featuring classic characters, maintains traditional casting without explicit race or gender swaps for its established human roles. The narrative focuses on a lighthearted adventure, presenting no critical portrayal of traditional identities or explicit DEI themes.
Secondary
Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz is an animated children's film that continues the adventures of Dorothy, Tom, and Jerry in the Land of Oz. The narrative focuses on classic characters and slapstick comedy, with no discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes present in the story.
The film is an animated musical adventure. Female characters like Dorothy, the Wicked Witch, and Glinda primarily use their wits or magic, respectively. There are no instances where a female character engages in and wins direct physical combat against one or more male opponents.
The film features established characters from both Tom and Jerry and The Wizard of Oz. All major characters, including those from Oz portrayed by Tom and Jerry characters, retain their canonically established genders from the source material.
This animated film features characters from "The Wizard of Oz." All human characters, such as Dorothy, Aunt Em, and the Wizard, are depicted consistent with their established racial portrayals from the original source material. There are no instances of a character established as one race being portrayed as a different race.
Viewer Rating Breakdown
Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
User Ratings


Critic Ratings


More Like This



















