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Winnie the Pooh: Springtime with Roo (2004)

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Leans Traditional
Viewer Rating
Rating: 6.6
Winnie the Pooh: Springtime with Roo poster

Overview

Spring has sprung, and baby Roo is excited to get out and explore and make new friends. But Rabbit seems preoccupied with spring cleaning, instead of embracing his usual role of playing Easter Bunny. Leave it to Roo to show Rabbit -- through love -- that it's more important who you love and not who's in charge.


Starring Cast


Where to watch

Disney Plus logoDisney Plus
Apple TV logoApple TV
Google Play logoGoogle Play
Powered byJustWatch

Bias Dimensions

Political: Center
Diversity: Low
Christianity: Positive

Overview

Spring has sprung, and baby Roo is excited to get out and explore and make new friends. But Rabbit seems preoccupied with spring cleaning, instead of embracing his usual role of playing Easter Bunny. Leave it to Roo to show Rabbit -- through love -- that it's more important who you love and not who's in charge.


Starring Cast


Where to watch

Disney Plus logoDisney Plus
Apple TV logoApple TV
Google Play logoGoogle Play
Powered byJustWatch

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Leans Traditional

Primary

The film focuses on apolitical themes of friendship, patience, and the importance of celebrating traditions within a community, without promoting any specific political ideology.

This animated film features anthropomorphic animal characters with a predominantly white voice cast, consistent with the franchise's traditional casting. The narrative focuses on themes of friendship and the celebration of spring, without engaging in any critique or negative portrayal of traditional human identities.

Secondary

The film portrays the spirit of Easter, a major Christian holiday, with warmth and affirmation. The narrative champions its values of community, joy, and renewal, depicting the character who rejects it as misguided and in need of rediscovering its true meaning.

This film, part of the Winnie the Pooh franchise, does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative centers on classic Pooh characters and their springtime activities, offering no relevant content for LGBTQ+ portrayal analysis.

This film, an animated children's story featuring Winnie the Pooh characters, does not include any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative focuses on traditional childhood experiences and friendships within the Hundred Acre Wood.

This animated film is a children's story focusing on themes of friendship and spring. It does not contain any scenes depicting physical combat, and therefore no female characters are shown defeating male opponents in such encounters.

This film is an adaptation of A.A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh stories. All established characters, such as Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Rabbit, Eeyore, Kanga, Roo, Owl, and Christopher Robin, maintain their canonical genders from the original source material and prior adaptations.

The film features anthropomorphic animal characters and Christopher Robin. The animal characters do not have a human race, and Christopher Robin's portrayal is consistent with his established depiction as a white child in source material and prior adaptations.


Viewer Rating Breakdown

6.6

Viewer Rating

Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

User Ratings

IMDB logo
6.3
The Movie Database logo
6.8

Critic Ratings

Rotten Tomatoes logo
N/A
Metacritic logo
N/A

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