

The Little Prince & Friends

The Little Prince & Friends
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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 adventure series draws on the world of The Little Prince with a warm, imaginative tone, using space travel, unusual planets, and simple conflicts that young children can follow. Sensitive material mainly comes from moments of danger, chases, controlling or threatening villains, and brief situations where characters are separated, captured, or placed in trouble, with no graphic violence and no adult content. The intensity stays low to mild, and tense scenes are usually short and balanced by teamwork, humor, and reassuring resolutions, so the overall experience is gentler than many family adventure cartoons. For most children around age 4, it can be suitable if they already handle light cartoon suspense, and parents can help by naming feelings, reminding children that the danger is highly stylized, and pausing if a specific creature or chase feels overwhelming.
Synopsis
On board his spaceship B612, The Little Prince takes two children from our world, Charlotte and Elijah, to meet the universe and its inhabitants and live thrilling adventures together.
Difficult scenes
Several episodes are built around a mission in which the Little Prince, Charlotte, and Elijah reach a planet in trouble and must deal with a harsh ruler, guards, or an unstable force. For a young child, these scenes may create mild suspense because the heroes are sometimes chased, blocked, or threatened with capture, even though the presentation stays very cartoon based and shows no visible injury. Some adventures use unusual settings that may feel a bit intense, with space phenomena, invasive machines, strange creatures, or a world that seems to be slipping out of control. These scenes can unsettle children who are sensitive to unfamiliar atmospheres, especially when the characters have to run, hide, or solve a problem quickly before things get worse, even if the story soon returns to a reassuring tone. There are also gentle emotional moments when the inhabitants of a planet are sad, isolated, or restricted by an unfair rule or a broader imbalance. These scenes are not heavy, but they may prompt questions about loneliness, fear of separation, or unfairness, which can give parents a useful opening for a calm conversation after the episode.
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
- 2023
- Runtime
- 11m
- Countries
- France
- Original language
- FR
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 adventure series draws on the world of The Little Prince with a warm, imaginative tone, using space travel, unusual planets, and simple conflicts that young children can follow. Sensitive material mainly comes from moments of danger, chases, controlling or threatening villains, and brief situations where characters are separated, captured, or placed in trouble, with no graphic violence and no adult content. The intensity stays low to mild, and tense scenes are usually short and balanced by teamwork, humor, and reassuring resolutions, so the overall experience is gentler than many family adventure cartoons. For most children around age 4, it can be suitable if they already handle light cartoon suspense, and parents can help by naming feelings, reminding children that the danger is highly stylized, and pausing if a specific creature or chase feels overwhelming.
Synopsis
On board his spaceship B612, The Little Prince takes two children from our world, Charlotte and Elijah, to meet the universe and its inhabitants and live thrilling adventures together.
Difficult scenes
Several episodes are built around a mission in which the Little Prince, Charlotte, and Elijah reach a planet in trouble and must deal with a harsh ruler, guards, or an unstable force. For a young child, these scenes may create mild suspense because the heroes are sometimes chased, blocked, or threatened with capture, even though the presentation stays very cartoon based and shows no visible injury. Some adventures use unusual settings that may feel a bit intense, with space phenomena, invasive machines, strange creatures, or a world that seems to be slipping out of control. These scenes can unsettle children who are sensitive to unfamiliar atmospheres, especially when the characters have to run, hide, or solve a problem quickly before things get worse, even if the story soon returns to a reassuring tone. There are also gentle emotional moments when the inhabitants of a planet are sad, isolated, or restricted by an unfair rule or a broader imbalance. These scenes are not heavy, but they may prompt questions about loneliness, fear of separation, or unfairness, which can give parents a useful opening for a calm conversation after the episode.