Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

No Packers, No Life (2025)
Sports documentary following the Japanese Packers Cheering Team as they travel from Tokyo to Wisconsin, forge friendships, and attend their first Green Bay Packers game in person. Directed by Craig Benzine and produced by Ty Morse, it spotlights fans Cheppo, Omi, Ayaka, and Packers figures Mason Crosby and Cliff Christl.
Sports documentary following the Japanese Packers Cheering Team as they travel from Tokyo to Wisconsin, forge friendships, and attend their first Green Bay Packers game in person. Directed by Craig Benzine and produced by Ty Morse, it spotlights fans Cheppo, Omi, Ayaka, and Packers figures Mason Crosby and Cliff Christl.
The documentary highlights bonds formed across cultures via enthusiasm for the Green Bay Packers, portraying themes of identity and ritual without ideological slant. Its apolitical emphasis on universal human connections through fandom determines the neutral assessment.
The documentary showcases visible diversity by centering Asian Japanese fans alongside white American Packers affiliates, reflecting natural cultural representation in a non-fiction context. Its narrative emphasizes positive intercultural bonds and welcoming attitudes without critiquing traditional identities, presenting inclusion through shared passion as a harmonious theme.
The documentary portrays cross-cultural friendships and community hospitality among Packers fans without depicting family structures, roles, or values. The absence of family content leads to a neutral rating.
The documentary contains no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, focusing instead on Japanese fans' dedication to the Green Bay Packers.
The film contains no portrayal of transsexual characters or themes. Its narrative centers on Japanese fans' enthusiasm for the Green Bay Packers and their trips to Wisconsin games, highlighting cross-cultural bonds formed through shared sports passion.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This documentary profiles the real-life Japanese Packers Cheering Team and their interactions with Packers figures, featuring no fictional characters or adaptations that involve gender swaps.
This documentary features real Japanese Packers fans and team figures appearing as themselves, with no adaptations, fictional characters, or historical portrayals involving racial changes.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources





















