

Jasper: Journey to the End of the World
Jasper und das Limonadenkomplott

Jasper: Journey to the End of the World
Jasper und das Limonadenkomplott
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What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
1/5
Mild
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
1/5
Accessible
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated family film offers a light adventure between icy landscapes, a colorful harbor, and a sea voyage, with an overall warm and curious tone. The main sensitive material comes from brief danger scenes, chases, a clearly villainous antagonist, and a threat involving stolen eggs from an endangered bird species, which may create mild tension for very young viewers. The intensity appears low to moderate and highly cartoon styled, with no graphic violence, no sexual content, and little to no concerning language, making it much gentler than more action driven family adventures. Most children should be broadly safe with it from about age 5, though many will be more engaged around age 6, when they can follow the simple suspense and travel stakes without being too unsettled by the villain or separation moments.
Synopsis
Between the icy South Pole and a colorful sea-port, plays the adventure of the penguin brothers Jasper and Junior, who, with the help of 9 year old Emma, retrieve the eggs of a threatened parrot species from the evil Dr. Block.
Difficult scenes
Early in the story, Jasper leaves his familiar environment and is carried toward an unknown world. That separation, and the idea of being alone in a new place, may unsettle children who are especially sensitive to getting lost or being far from family. The story includes an antagonist, Dr. Block, who is clearly portrayed as dangerous and driven by a harmful plan. His scenes create chase and threat based tension, but they stay within a cartoon register, with no detailed injuries or realistic violence. When the heroes try to recover the threatened eggs, several moments rely on suspense and urgency. Younger viewers may worry about the animals being in danger, even though the overall tone stays accessible, adventurous, and reassuring.
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
- 2009
- Runtime
- 1h 22m
- Countries
- Germany, France, Romania
- Original language
- DE
- Studios
- Toons'N'Tales, Amuse Films, Dacodac
Content barometer
Violence
1/5
Mild
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
1/5
Accessible
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated family film offers a light adventure between icy landscapes, a colorful harbor, and a sea voyage, with an overall warm and curious tone. The main sensitive material comes from brief danger scenes, chases, a clearly villainous antagonist, and a threat involving stolen eggs from an endangered bird species, which may create mild tension for very young viewers. The intensity appears low to moderate and highly cartoon styled, with no graphic violence, no sexual content, and little to no concerning language, making it much gentler than more action driven family adventures. Most children should be broadly safe with it from about age 5, though many will be more engaged around age 6, when they can follow the simple suspense and travel stakes without being too unsettled by the villain or separation moments.
Synopsis
Between the icy South Pole and a colorful sea-port, plays the adventure of the penguin brothers Jasper and Junior, who, with the help of 9 year old Emma, retrieve the eggs of a threatened parrot species from the evil Dr. Block.
Difficult scenes
Early in the story, Jasper leaves his familiar environment and is carried toward an unknown world. That separation, and the idea of being alone in a new place, may unsettle children who are especially sensitive to getting lost or being far from family. The story includes an antagonist, Dr. Block, who is clearly portrayed as dangerous and driven by a harmful plan. His scenes create chase and threat based tension, but they stay within a cartoon register, with no detailed injuries or realistic violence. When the heroes try to recover the threatened eggs, several moments rely on suspense and urgency. Younger viewers may worry about the animals being in danger, even though the overall tone stays accessible, adventurous, and reassuring.