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Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
The Wicked Queen is dead but her brother, Lord Maliss, seeks for revenge. Using the Magic Mirror to locate Snow White and the Prince, he transforms into a dragon and attacks. Maliss takes the Prince to the Realm of Doom. Snow White, with the aid of the Seven Dwarfesses, cousins of the Sevens Dwarves, must embark on a quest to save her true love.
The Wicked Queen is dead but her brother, Lord Maliss, seeks for revenge. Using the Magic Mirror to locate Snow White and the Prince, he transforms into a dragon and attacks. Maliss takes the Prince to the Realm of Doom. Snow White, with the aid of the Seven Dwarfesses, cousins of the Sevens Dwarves, must embark on a quest to save her true love.
The film is a traditional animated fairy tale sequel centered on a classic good versus evil conflict and a rescue mission. Its themes of heroism, magic, and the triumph of good are universal and lack explicit political messaging, resulting in a neutral bias rating.
This animated fairy tale sequel maintains traditional character depictions for its main protagonists. The narrative focuses on classic themes of good versus evil and romance, without critiquing or negatively framing traditional identities.
The animated film "Happily Ever After" (1990) does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on traditional fairy tale elements, with no explicit or implicit LGBTQ+ representation present in the plot or character arcs.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film introduces new female characters, the Dwarfelles, who replace the absent male Seven Dwarfs. Similarly, the primary antagonist, Lord Maliss, is a new character who is the brother of the original Evil Queen. These are new characters filling similar roles, not gender-swapped versions of established characters.
The film "Happily Ever After" (1989) is an animated sequel to "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" (1937). The main characters, including Snow White, maintain their original racial depiction from the established canon. No characters canonically or widely established as one race are portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources