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Where the Wild Things Are (2009)

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Leans Traditional
Viewer Rating
Rating: 6.9
Where the Wild Things Are poster

Overview

Max imagines running away from his mom and sailing to a far-off land where large talking beasts—Ira, Carol, Douglas, the Bull, Judith and Alexander—crown him as their king, play rumpus, build forts and discover secret hideaways.


Starring Cast


Where to watch

Apple TV logoApple TV
Google Play logoGoogle Play
Fandango
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Bias Dimensions

Political: Center
Diversity: Low

Overview

Max imagines running away from his mom and sailing to a far-off land where large talking beasts—Ira, Carol, Douglas, the Bull, Judith and Alexander—crown him as their king, play rumpus, build forts and discover secret hideaways.


Starring Cast


Where to watch

Apple TV logoApple TV
Google Play logoGoogle Play
Fandango
Powered byJustWatch

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Leans Traditional

Primary

The film is neutral as its core narrative focuses on universal themes of childhood emotional development, imagination, and family relationships, offering a psychological exploration of a child's internal world rather than promoting any specific political ideology.

The movie features a predominantly white human cast, consistent with traditional casting, and its non-human characters do not represent human racial diversity. The narrative centers on a young white male protagonist's emotional journey, without critiquing traditional identities or incorporating explicit DEI themes into its core story.

Secondary

Where the Wild Things Are does not include any explicit or implicit LGBTQ+ characters, relationships, or themes within its narrative. The story focuses on a young boy's imaginative journey and his emotional development, without touching upon queer identity in any capacity, resulting in an N/A rating for LGBTQ+ portrayal.

The film "Where the Wild Things Are" does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. Its narrative focuses on a young boy's imaginative journey and emotional development, without engaging with transgender identity in any capacity.

The film focuses on a young boy's imaginative journey with large, emotional creatures. While there is playful roughhousing and emotional conflict among the characters, no female character engages in or wins direct physical combat against one or more male opponents using skill or strength.

The film is an adaptation of Maurice Sendak's book. All main characters, including Max and the Wild Things, retain their established genders from the original source material. No character's gender was altered.

The film adapts Maurice Sendak's book, where the main character, Max, is depicted as a white boy. The movie portrays Max with a white actor. The Wild Things are non-human creatures, so the concept of a race swap does not apply to them. No characters meet the definition of a race swap.


Viewer Rating Breakdown

6.9

Viewer Rating

Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

User Ratings

IMDB logo
6.7
The Movie Database logo
6.5

Critic Ratings

Rotten Tomatoes logo
7.3
Metacritic logo
7.1

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