

The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle

The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle
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
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 series follows a comic duo through globe trotting adventures with a light, fast paced tone that is clearly designed for children. The main sensitive material comes from chases, traps, villain threats, and moments of peril, yet the presentation stays highly stylized, with no realistic injuries or lingering pain. The intensity is low to mild, though conflict appears regularly, so very sensitive young viewers may still react to shouting, scheming villains, or repeated suspense. There are also somewhat dated gender stereotypes in the way some characters are framed, especially around the femme fatale trope, and that may be worth briefly discussing if a child takes those ideas literally. For most children, this remains a playful and accessible adventure, and parents can help by framing the danger as cartoon comedy and by reinforcing that trickery and intimidation are not admirable behavior.
Synopsis
The world-famous talking moose and flying squirrel are back in The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, a comedy about two goofball friends who end up in harrowing situations but end up saving the day time and again. As their silly ambitions dovetail with Fearless Leader's sinister plans to take over the world, they are set on a collision course with his notorious super spies Boris and Natasha.
Difficult scenes
Fearless Leader, Boris, and Natasha appear repeatedly as threatening opponents, with plans to control the world and trap or capture the heroes. Even though the tone stays comedic, their constant scheming may create mild tension for young children who are uneasy with pushy villains or harsh voices. In several sequences, Rocky and Bullwinkle end up in cartoon danger involving chases, falls, machines, or traps that look risky in the moment. The treatment is silly and consequence free, but the steady stream of peril may feel a little intense for a very sensitive preschool age viewer. Natasha is framed through a caricatured femme fatale style, mostly for comedy. This is not sexual content, but it can carry somewhat dated gender stereotypes, which some parents may prefer to name and briefly discuss with children.
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
- 2018
- Runtime
- 30m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Directed by
- Marco Schnabel, David P. Smith
- Main cast
- Tara Strong, Brad Norman, Ben Diskin, Rachel Butera, Piotr Michael, Daran Norris
- Studios
- DreamWorks Animation Television, Jay Ward Productions
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 series follows a comic duo through globe trotting adventures with a light, fast paced tone that is clearly designed for children. The main sensitive material comes from chases, traps, villain threats, and moments of peril, yet the presentation stays highly stylized, with no realistic injuries or lingering pain. The intensity is low to mild, though conflict appears regularly, so very sensitive young viewers may still react to shouting, scheming villains, or repeated suspense. There are also somewhat dated gender stereotypes in the way some characters are framed, especially around the femme fatale trope, and that may be worth briefly discussing if a child takes those ideas literally. For most children, this remains a playful and accessible adventure, and parents can help by framing the danger as cartoon comedy and by reinforcing that trickery and intimidation are not admirable behavior.
Synopsis
The world-famous talking moose and flying squirrel are back in The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, a comedy about two goofball friends who end up in harrowing situations but end up saving the day time and again. As their silly ambitions dovetail with Fearless Leader's sinister plans to take over the world, they are set on a collision course with his notorious super spies Boris and Natasha.
Difficult scenes
Fearless Leader, Boris, and Natasha appear repeatedly as threatening opponents, with plans to control the world and trap or capture the heroes. Even though the tone stays comedic, their constant scheming may create mild tension for young children who are uneasy with pushy villains or harsh voices. In several sequences, Rocky and Bullwinkle end up in cartoon danger involving chases, falls, machines, or traps that look risky in the moment. The treatment is silly and consequence free, but the steady stream of peril may feel a little intense for a very sensitive preschool age viewer. Natasha is framed through a caricatured femme fatale style, mostly for comedy. This is not sexual content, but it can carry somewhat dated gender stereotypes, which some parents may prefer to name and briefly discuss with children.