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The Tigger Movie

The Tigger Movie

1h 17m2000United States of America
AnimationFamilialComédie

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Watch-outs

Sadness / tears

What this film brings

friendshipfamilyhelpfulnessbelonging

Content barometer

Violence

1/5

légerfort

Mild

Fear

1/5

légerfort

Mild

Sexuality

0/5

légerfort

None

Language

0/5

légerfort

None

Narrative complexity

1/5

légerfort

Accessible

Adult themes

0/5

légerfort

None

Expert review

This animated film takes place in the very gentle Winnie the Pooh world, with a warm, playful atmosphere centered on belonging and chosen family. Sensitive content is limited, but there are a few mild peril scenes, cartoon style physical mishaps, a snowstorm, an avalanche, and some emotional sadness linked to feeling alone or rejected. The intensity stays low to moderate and these moments are occasional, with no realistic violence, no meaningful coarse language, and no adult content, though some younger children may still feel upset by Tigger's hurt feelings or be briefly unsettled by the snowy danger sequence. For most children, it is suitable from about age 4, with stronger engagement closer to age 5 if they already handle short moments of worry. Parents may want to reassure children beforehand that the characters make mistakes while trying to help, and that the overall story remains kind and safe.

Synopsis

Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Owl, Kanga, Roo, and Rabbit are preparing a suitable winter home for Eeyore, the perennially dejected donkey, but Tigger's continual bouncing interrupts their efforts. Rabbit suggests that Tigger go find others of his kind to bounce with, but Tigger thinks "the most wonderful thing about tiggers is" he's "the only one!" Just in case though, the joyously jouncy feline sets out to see if he can find relatives.

Difficult scenes

Early in the story, Tigger disrupts his friends' winter preparations with his boundless energy and causes several accidental mishaps. These scenes stay comic and non graphic, but the criticism he receives may upset a young child who is sensitive to rejection or embarrassment. A central part of the film involves Tigger searching for a family of his own and feeling deeply disappointed when he believes no one is there for him. This emotional pain is not heavy in an adult dramatic sense, but it is clear enough to make some children sad, especially those who respond strongly to themes of loneliness or not belonging. Later, a lie meant to cheer him up leads to a sharper emotional moment when the deception starts to fall apart. This scene may be unsettling for children because it shows how an act meant as kindness can still feel hurtful and betraying to the person affected. In the winter section, Tigger goes off into a snowstorm and the mood becomes briefly more tense. An avalanche follows, creating a genuine peril moment, though it is handled in a highly stylized, fast moving way that remains suitable for young viewers.

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
2000
Runtime
1h 17m
Countries
United States of America
Original language
EN
Directed by
Jun Falkenstein
Main cast
Jim Cummings, Nikita Hopkins, Ken Sansom, John Fiedler, Peter Cullen, Andre Stojka, Kath Soucie, Tom Attenborough, John Hurt, Frank Welker
Studios
Walt Disney Pictures, DisneyToon Studios, Disney Television Animation