When the Justice League are captured by Lex Luthor, Superman's dog, Krypto, forms a team of shelter-pets who were given super-powers: A hound named Ace, who becomes super-strong, a pig named PB, who can grow to giant-siz...
When the Justice League are captured by Lex Luthor, Superman's dog, Krypto, forms a team of shelter-pets who were given super-powers: A hound named Ace, who becomes super-strong, a pig named PB, who can grow to giant-siz...
The film's central subject matter and its championed solution are overwhelmingly apolitical, focusing on universal themes of personal growth, friendship, and teamwork without engaging with specific political ideologies or societal critiques.
The movie incorporates significant diversity through its voice casting, notably featuring non-white actors in roles for traditionally white Justice League characters. However, its narrative maintains a traditional framing, avoiding critical portrayals of traditional identities or making DEI themes central to the plot.
DC League of Super-Pets does not include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative centers on the animal companions of the Justice League, with no elements that could be interpreted as an LGBTQ+ portrayal, resulting in an N/A rating.
Female characters like Lulu, PB, and Merton participate in combat against male opponents. However, their victories are consistently achieved through the use of overwhelming superpowers (e.g., telekinesis, size manipulation, super speed), rather than physical skill, strength, or martial arts. No scenes depict a female character defeating a male opponent in direct physical combat without relying on superpowers.
The film features established DC characters and their animal companions, all of whom maintain their canonical genders. New animal characters introduced for the film do not have prior established genders, thus their portrayal does not constitute a gender swap.
All major characters, including the Justice League members, are visually depicted in a manner consistent with their established canonical races. No character originally established as one race is portrayed on screen as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources