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Your favorite Jungle Book characters return to save the day in the exciting Waterfall Rescue. Join Mowgli, Baloo and Lali on a brave mission to rescue their animal friends and save their jungle home. Get ready for more than 60 action-packed minutes of the most exciting jungle adventure yet!
Your favorite Jungle Book characters return to save the day in the exciting Waterfall Rescue. Join Mowgli, Baloo and Lali on a brave mission to rescue their animal friends and save their jungle home. Get ready for more than 60 action-packed minutes of the most exciting jungle adventure yet!
The film's central conflict, a rescue from a natural danger, is inherently apolitical. The narrative likely champions universal virtues like cooperation and bravery, positioning it as neutral.
This animated adaptation of The Jungle Book features an inherently diverse main character, Mowgli, and animal characters, without clear evidence of explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. The narrative is expected to focus on adventure and character interactions, rather than explicitly critiquing traditional identities or centering on strong DEI themes.
The film "The Jungle Book: Waterfall Rescue" does not contain any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative focuses on traditional adventure elements without incorporating queer identities or experiences, resulting in no portrayal to evaluate.
The film does not feature any female characters engaging in direct physical combat where they defeat one or more male opponents through skill, strength, or martial arts. Female characters are present but are not depicted in such combative roles.
This adaptation of "The Jungle Book" does not feature any characters whose gender was canonically established as one gender in the source material or prior adaptations and is portrayed as a different gender in this film. All major characters retain their traditional genders.
The film is an animated adaptation of Rudyard Kipling's 'The Jungle Book.' The primary human character, Mowgli, is consistently depicted as an Indian boy, aligning with his established racial identity from the source material. No characters established as one race are portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources