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Night of the Living Carrots (2011)
After a mutant peculiar pumpkin blows up on the Murphy’s carrot lawn, zombie green beans begin fighting the immediate place, and it’s up to the Creatures to preserve the evening again.
After a mutant peculiar pumpkin blows up on the Murphy’s carrot lawn, zombie green beans begin fighting the immediate place, and it’s up to the Creatures to preserve the evening again.
The film's central conflict, involving mutant carrots and their defeat by a team of monsters, is entirely apolitical, focusing on comedic action and character-driven humor without any discernible ideological subtext.
This animated short features a predominantly white voice cast for its established monster characters, without any explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. The narrative focuses on comedic horror and does not incorporate or critique traditional identities, nor does it feature any explicit DEI themes.
This animated Halloween special, part of the 'Monsters vs. Aliens' franchise, focuses on comedic monster adventures. There are no discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes present in the film's plot or character arcs, resulting in no impact on LGBTQ+ representation.
Night of the Living Carrots is an animated short film that does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative centers on comedic horror involving sentient carrots and established characters from the Monsters vs. Aliens franchise, with no elements related to gender identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This film is a short sequel to "Monsters vs. Aliens." All established main characters retain their original genders as portrayed in the preceding film and franchise. No characters were canonically, historically, or widely established as one gender and then portrayed as a different gender.
This animated short features established characters from "Monsters vs. Aliens." No characters, whether human or monster, have their race altered from their original canonical depictions in the source material.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























