Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

Ice Age: The Great Egg-Scapade (2016)
A harried prehistoric bird mother entrusts her precious, soon-to-hatch egg to Sid. When she recommends him to her neighbours, business booms at his new egg-sitting service. However, dastardly pirate bunny, Squint, who is seeking revenge on the herd, steals, camouflages and hides all the eggs. Once again, with Squint’s twin brother assisting, Manny, Diego and the rest of the gang come to the rescue and take off on a daring mission that turns into the world’s first Easter egg hunt.
A harried prehistoric bird mother entrusts her precious, soon-to-hatch egg to Sid. When she recommends him to her neighbours, business booms at his new egg-sitting service. However, dastardly pirate bunny, Squint, who is seeking revenge on the herd, steals, camouflages and hides all the eggs. Once again, with Squint’s twin brother assisting, Manny, Diego and the rest of the gang come to the rescue and take off on a daring mission that turns into the world’s first Easter egg hunt.
The film's central conflict, involving the protection of family and community from individual wrongdoing, is resolved through collective effort and emphasizes universal, apolitical values common in children's entertainment, leading to a neutral rating.
This animated short film primarily features animal characters, which inherently bypasses direct human-centric DEI considerations for casting and character representation. The narrative focuses on a straightforward adventure without engaging in critical portrayals of traditional human identities or explicit DEI themes.
This animated TV special from the Ice Age franchise does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on the established heterosexual family units and their adventures, with no elements suggesting queer representation.
This animated TV special, part of the Ice Age franchise, does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative focuses on the established herd's adventures with a villainous bunny and a collection of eggs, without engaging with gender identity topics.
The film does not feature any scenes where a female character engages in and wins direct physical combat against one or more male opponents. Action sequences primarily involve the retrieval of stolen eggs through chases and environmental interactions, rather than skilled hand-to-hand confrontations.
This film is a TV special within an existing franchise. All established characters maintain their canonical genders, and new characters introduced for this special do not represent gender-swapped versions of prior characters.
The film features animated prehistoric animal characters. The concept of human race, and thus a 'race swap' as defined, does not apply to these non-human characters.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























