Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
The classic children's book The Crippled Lamb comes to home video in this special adaptation with full animation, original songs, and a name value cast including Jodi Benson (The Little Mermaid) and Robby Benson (Beauty and the Beast, Ice Castles) performing character voicings.
The classic children's book The Crippled Lamb comes to home video in this special adaptation with full animation, original songs, and a name value cast including Jodi Benson (The Little Mermaid) and Robby Benson (Beauty and the Beast, Ice Castles) performing character voicings.
The film's central themes of individual worth, inclusion, and divine purpose, set within a traditional religious narrative, are universal moral messages that do not explicitly promote or critique specific political ideologies, leading to a neutral rating.
This animated film from 2003 features traditional casting choices for its biblical narrative. The story focuses on a religious theme of a disabled lamb finding purpose, without engaging in critical portrayals of traditional identities or incorporating explicit DEI-driven narratives.
The film is a reverent animated retelling of the Nativity story, celebrating the birth of Jesus and conveying core Christian messages of hope, purpose, and divine love through the journey of a disabled lamb.
The film respectfully portrays the Jewish cultural and religious context of the Nativity, depicting characters like Mary, Joseph, and the shepherds as devout individuals whose faith and traditions are integral to the story's setting.
The Crippled Lamb is an animated Christmas special that focuses on a young lamb's journey and the biblical Nativity story. There are no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, themes, or plot points present within the film's narrative.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This animated adaptation of Max Lucado's book and the Nativity story maintains the established genders of all its characters, including Joshua the lamb, Mary, and Joseph. No canonical characters are portrayed with a different gender.
The film primarily features animated animal characters, which do not have a human race. The human biblical figures are depicted in a generalized animated style, consistent with typical portrayals, and there is no evidence of a character established as one race being portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources