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During a Japanese robotic exploration to find life on the other side of the moon, Nobita is watching from Earth and sees the moon turn yellow. With the help of Doraemon, the pair travel to the moon and create bunnies that will build their own colony. After he returns, Nobita tells his class about their adventure but no one will believe him. That is until a new student and his sister arrive who appear to come from a very far away place.
During a Japanese robotic exploration to find life on the other side of the moon, Nobita is watching from Earth and sees the moon turn yellow. With the help of Doraemon, the pair travel to the moon and create bunnies that will build their own colony. After he returns, Nobita tells his class about their adventure but no one will believe him. That is until a new student and his sister arrive who appear to come from a very far away place.
The film's dominant themes align with progressive values, as its central conflict critiques the exploitation of natural resources and a peaceful civilization by a powerful, greedy alien race, advocating for environmental protection and anti-exploitation.
The film features a diverse cast of characters in terms of personality and gender, consistent with the established style of the anime franchise, without explicit DEI-driven casting interventions. Its narrative maintains a neutral to positive framing of traditional identities, focusing on universal themes of friendship and adventure rather than engaging in critical portrayals or explicit DEI critiques.
The film 'Doraemon: Nobita's Chronicle of the Moon Exploration' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its plot centers on a fantastical adventure, friendship, and scientific discovery, without engaging with queer identity in any capacity.
The film features female characters such as Shizuka Minamoto and Luna. While they are involved in the adventure, neither character engages in or wins direct close-quarters physical combat against male opponents. Their contributions are not through martial arts, hand-to-hand fighting, or melee weapons.
The film introduces new characters for its original story, but the established main characters from the Doraemon franchise (Doraemon, Nobita, Shizuka, Gian, Suneo) retain their canonical genders. No existing character was portrayed as a different gender.
The film features the established Japanese characters from the Doraemon franchise, who maintain their original East Asian depiction. New characters introduced in this installment do not constitute race swaps of pre-existing roles.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources