Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
When the sadness of her father's disappearance gets to Molly Hale, she unknowingly uses the Unown to create her own dream world along with Entei, who she believes to be her father. When Entei kidnaps Ash's mother, Ash — alongside Misty and Brock — invade the mansion looking for his mom and trying to stop the mysteries of Molly's Dream World and Entei!
When the sadness of her father's disappearance gets to Molly Hale, she unknowingly uses the Unown to create her own dream world along with Entei, who she believes to be her father. When Entei kidnaps Ash's mother, Ash — alongside Misty and Brock — invade the mansion looking for his mom and trying to stop the mysteries of Molly's Dream World and Entei!
The film's central focus on universal themes of grief, escapism, and the power of friendship, resolved through individual acceptance and communal support, prevents it from aligning strongly with any specific political ideology.
The movie, an anime production, features character designs consistent with its style, without engaging in explicit DEI-driven recasting of traditionally white roles. Its narrative centers on themes of family and the consequences of power, and does not include any critical portrayal of traditional identities or explicit DEI themes as central to the plot.
The film does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, relationships, or themes. Its narrative centers on a young girl's loneliness and the magical creation of an illusionary family, with no elements pertaining to queer identity or experiences.
Pokémon 3: The Movie does not include any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative centers on a young girl's fantasy world created by the Unown, focusing on themes of family, loss, and the power of imagination without engaging with transgender identity.
The film primarily features Pokémon battles and challenges created by the Unown. No female characters engage in or win direct physical combat against male opponents. Their roles are either supportive, antagonistic through Pokémon, or central to the plot without physical fighting.
All established characters in Pokémon 3 the Movie: Spell of the Unown maintain their canonical genders from previous installments. New characters introduced in the film do not constitute gender swaps.
This animated film features established characters from the Pokémon franchise. All characters are depicted consistently with their long-standing animated designs, which do not show any changes in race from prior canon. No character originally established as one race is portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources