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Lost Ollie

Lost Ollie

45m2022United States of America
AnimationFamilialDrame

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Watch-outs

Scary scenesDeath / griefSadness / tears

What this film brings

friendshiployaltyresiliencehope

Content barometer

Violence

1/5

légerfort

Mild

Fear

2/5

légerfort

A few scenes

Sexuality

0/5

légerfort

None

Language

0/5

légerfort

None

Narrative complexity

2/5

légerfort

Moderate

Adult themes

0/5

légerfort

None

Expert review

Lost Ollie is a family oriented live action and animation mini series with a gentle, nostalgic mood that is often sad rather than truly frightening. The main sensitive material comes from separation, grief, illness, painful memories, and several scenes where small toy characters are chased, threatened, or roughly handled, creating more emotional weight than most shows aimed at very young children. The visual intensity stays moderate and there is very little concerning language, no sexual content, and essentially no substance material, however sadness and the fear of losing someone important are present throughout the story. For sensitive children, the biggest concern is not physical violence but the sustained melancholy and a few difficult family revelations that may be hard to process alone. I would advise parents to watch with children under about age 8, offer reassurance around loss and absence, and be ready to pause if hospital, crying, or separation scenes hit especially hard.

Synopsis

A patchwork rabbit with floppy ears and fuzzy memories embarks on an epic quest to find his best friend — the young boy he desperately loves.

Difficult scenes

The story begins with a painful separation between Ollie and the child he loves. For a young viewer, simply watching a lost toy feel confused, alone, and determined to find his friend can be upsetting, especially because the journey is tied to fuzzy memories and visible emotional distress. Several memories gradually reveal the hardships Billy's family has faced, including scenes of sadness, crying, and a grief or illness related thread that can affect children quite strongly. Even without graphic imagery, these moments give the series an emotional seriousness that is unusual for a story led by a plush rabbit. Some danger scenes place the toys at risk, with chases, falls, and situations where they might be broken, trapped, or thrown away. The staging remains family accessible, but the characters feel vulnerable and alive enough that younger children may find these scenes stressful. The overall mood is often melancholy, with a sustained focus on absence, loss, and memory. A child around 4 or 5 may not understand every narrative detail, yet can still absorb the characters' sadness very intensely, which may make the experience feel heavier than a typical adventure tale.

Where to watch

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

About this title

Format
TV series
Year
2022
Runtime
45m
Countries
United States of America
Original language
EN
Directed by
Shannon Tindle
Main cast
Jonathan Groff, Mary J. Blige, Tim Blake Nelson, Jake Johnson, Gina Rodriguez, Kesler Talbot
Studios
21 Laps Entertainment, Industrial Light & Magic, Fufufufu Entertainment