Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
Each day, the gang hatches a plan to get off the island, but is thwarted by unexpected twists and turns. They face extreme weather, challenging adventures and new creatures along the way, solving one mystery only to reveal another. The island tests Mia, Buddy, Rosie and Hamylton constantly. Only by passing these tests and going deep into the heart of darkness can our heroes find a way back home.
Each day, the gang hatches a plan to get off the island, but is thwarted by unexpected twists and turns. They face extreme weather, challenging adventures and new creatures along the way, solving one mystery only to reveal another. The island tests Mia, Buddy, Rosie and Hamylton constantly. Only by passing these tests and going deep into the heart of darkness can our heroes find a way back home.
The film and broader franchise consistently promote universal values of cooperation, teamwork, and unity in overcoming challenges, explicitly avoiding overt partisan or ideological stances.
The animated series features a diverse voice cast with actors from various ethnic backgrounds and includes characters of different species, promoting themes of cooperation and understanding across differences. The narrative centers on positive values of teamwork and acceptance, without critiquing traditional identities.
Angry Birds Mystery Island does not explicitly feature LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. While the broader franchise has shown LGBTQ+ support, this specific series focuses on adventure and mystery without emphasizing LGBTQ+ representation, resulting in no identifiable depiction.
The series focuses on teamwork, exploration, and solving environmental puzzles. There are no traditional combat scenes, duels, or physical confrontations between female and male characters. Female characters like Mia and Rosie contribute through intelligence and cooperation, not physical combat against male opponents.
The series introduces Jo, a new non-binary character. However, as Jo is an original character with no prior canonical gender, their portrayal does not meet the definition of a gender swap. No other characters have their established canonical gender changed from source material.
The animated series features anthropomorphic animal characters (birds and a piglet) whose race was never specified or visually depicted in the source material. As such, no character meets the definition of having been race-swapped.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources