Back to movies
Coco 2

Coco 2

02029United States of America
AnimationAventureMusiqueFamilialFantastique

Your feedback improves this guide

Your feedback highlights guides that need a second look and keeps the rating trustworthy.

Does this age rating seem accurate to you?

Sign in to vote

Watch-outs

Death / griefSadness / tears

What this film brings

familymusicmemory

Content barometer

Violence

1/5

légerfort

Mild

Fear

1/5

légerfort

Mild

Sexuality

0/5

légerfort

None

Language

0/5

légerfort

None

Narrative complexity

0/5

légerfort

Simple

Adult themes

0/5

légerfort

None

Expert review

Coco 2 is currently announced as a sequel to a major Pixar family animation, but no reliable detailed plot is publicly available yet. Without a confirmed story summary, the safest approach is to start from the tone and content style of the first film, which combined warm adventure, music, family themes, and a stylized afterlife setting rather than realistic danger. The most likely sensitive material for young children would therefore be mild fear linked to skeleton imagery or scenes set among the dead, along with possible sadness connected to memory, absence, or grief, with no current evidence of strong violence, sexual content, harsh language, or substance use. If the sequel remains close in spirit to Coco, the intensity should stay moderate and manageable for many children, with a few emotional or visually striking scenes rather than sustained frightening content. For parents, the main guidance is to watch alongside children who are sensitive to symbolic death, family separation, or skeletal characters, and frame the movie as a musical family adventure about remembrance and connection.

Synopsis

The sequel to the 2017 film. Plot TBA.

Difficult scenes

No precise scene can be confirmed yet, because the film still has no detailed and verifiable plot summary available. The main point for parents to note is the likely return of a world populated by skeletons and imagery connected to death, which can unsettle some children around ages 4 to 6 even when the presentation is colorful and gentle. If the sequel keeps the emotional themes of the first film, it may include scenes about remembering a loved one, missing a family member, or fearing being forgotten. These moments would not necessarily be frightening, but they could prompt questions about death, aging, and separation, especially for very sensitive young children.

Where to watch

No verified platform for the US market yet. We keep this section updated as availability changes.

Availability checked on Apr 01, 2026

About this title

Format
Feature film
Year
2029
Countries
United States of America
Original language
EN
Directed by
Lee Unkrich
Studios
Pixar