

Octonauts and the Caves of Sac Actun

Octonauts and the Caves of Sac Actun
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
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
0/5
None
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This Octonauts animated film offers a very accessible underwater adventure, with a curious, active, and reassuring tone that is clearly designed for young children who can already follow simple rescue missions. The main sensitive elements come from mild peril scenes in narrow or dark caves, where characters may seem briefly lost, trapped, or worried, but there is no real violence and nothing visually disturbing. The intensity stays low throughout, and tense moments are short, calmly explained, and quickly balanced by teamwork and problem solving, which greatly reduces the chance of lasting fear. There is no sexual content, no meaningful strong language, and no substance use. For parents, the main thing to watch for is whether a child is especially sensitive to darkness or enclosed spaces, so it may help to watch together the first time and remind them that the team works together to keep everyone safe.
Synopsis
The Octonauts embark on an underwater adventure, navigating a set of challenging caves to help a small octopus friend return to the Caribbean Sea.
Difficult scenes
Several scenes take place inside an underwater cave system with narrow passages and occasional darkness. A young child may feel mild tension while watching the characters navigate, look for the right path, or seem briefly at risk of getting stuck, even though the presentation stays gentle and educational. The central story involves helping a small octopus reach safety and return to the right environment. This can create mild worry for very sensitive viewers because the animal seems vulnerable and needs the team s help, although the overall tone remains kind 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
- 2020
- Runtime
- 1h 12m
- Countries
- United Kingdom
- Original language
- EN
- Studios
- Mainframe Studios
Content barometer
Violence
0/5
None
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This Octonauts animated film offers a very accessible underwater adventure, with a curious, active, and reassuring tone that is clearly designed for young children who can already follow simple rescue missions. The main sensitive elements come from mild peril scenes in narrow or dark caves, where characters may seem briefly lost, trapped, or worried, but there is no real violence and nothing visually disturbing. The intensity stays low throughout, and tense moments are short, calmly explained, and quickly balanced by teamwork and problem solving, which greatly reduces the chance of lasting fear. There is no sexual content, no meaningful strong language, and no substance use. For parents, the main thing to watch for is whether a child is especially sensitive to darkness or enclosed spaces, so it may help to watch together the first time and remind them that the team works together to keep everyone safe.
Synopsis
The Octonauts embark on an underwater adventure, navigating a set of challenging caves to help a small octopus friend return to the Caribbean Sea.
Difficult scenes
Several scenes take place inside an underwater cave system with narrow passages and occasional darkness. A young child may feel mild tension while watching the characters navigate, look for the right path, or seem briefly at risk of getting stuck, even though the presentation stays gentle and educational. The central story involves helping a small octopus reach safety and return to the right environment. This can create mild worry for very sensitive viewers because the animal seems vulnerable and needs the team s help, although the overall tone remains kind and reassuring.