

Conni and the Mystery of the Crane

Conni and the Mystery of the Crane
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What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
0/5
None
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 family adventure follows Conni, her friends, and several animals through a light mystery filled with hiding, mishaps, and child friendly suspense, with an overall warm and reassuring tone. The main sensitive elements appear to be brief moments of stress, the possibility that an animal could be taken away from a safe place, and a few tense situations when the children try to keep secrets or fix the trouble caused by a pet. The intensity stays low and suitable for young viewers, because there is no meaningful violence, no sexual content, no notable harsh language, and the suspense seems occasional rather than sustained. The moment most likely to affect sensitive children is the presence of an injured crane or the fear that an animal may be separated from the people caring for it, which may bring short lived worry or sadness. Parents watching with younger children may simply want to offer reassurance during these scenes and use them to talk about caring for animals, honesty, and helping others.
Synopsis
While her parents are traveling, Conni experiences an exciting adventure at home with cat Mau, her friends, Grandpa Willi, a stuffy neighbor – and an injured crane, who urgently needs help. Will Conni and her friends manage to get crane Klaus to fly south with the migrating birds in time?
Difficult scenes
An injured bird needs help quickly, which may be upsetting for children who are especially sensitive to animals in distress. The scene is likely handled gently, but the visible injury and the sense of urgency could still create worry until the children and adults begin helping. Conni and her friends face a few tense moments as they try to hide one animal or prevent another from being taken away. This is not intense fear, but rather mild suspense in which a young viewer may worry that the animals will be punished, separated, or blamed unfairly.
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
- 2026
- Runtime
- 1h 19m
- Countries
- Germany
- Original language
- DE
- Directed by
- Dirk Hampel
- Studios
- Senator Film, Youngfilms
Content barometer
Violence
0/5
None
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 family adventure follows Conni, her friends, and several animals through a light mystery filled with hiding, mishaps, and child friendly suspense, with an overall warm and reassuring tone. The main sensitive elements appear to be brief moments of stress, the possibility that an animal could be taken away from a safe place, and a few tense situations when the children try to keep secrets or fix the trouble caused by a pet. The intensity stays low and suitable for young viewers, because there is no meaningful violence, no sexual content, no notable harsh language, and the suspense seems occasional rather than sustained. The moment most likely to affect sensitive children is the presence of an injured crane or the fear that an animal may be separated from the people caring for it, which may bring short lived worry or sadness. Parents watching with younger children may simply want to offer reassurance during these scenes and use them to talk about caring for animals, honesty, and helping others.
Synopsis
While her parents are traveling, Conni experiences an exciting adventure at home with cat Mau, her friends, Grandpa Willi, a stuffy neighbor – and an injured crane, who urgently needs help. Will Conni and her friends manage to get crane Klaus to fly south with the migrating birds in time?
Difficult scenes
An injured bird needs help quickly, which may be upsetting for children who are especially sensitive to animals in distress. The scene is likely handled gently, but the visible injury and the sense of urgency could still create worry until the children and adults begin helping. Conni and her friends face a few tense moments as they try to hide one animal or prevent another from being taken away. This is not intense fear, but rather mild suspense in which a young viewer may worry that the animals will be punished, separated, or blamed unfairly.