


Miraculous World: London, At the Edge of Time


Miraculous World: London, At the Edge of Time
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Watch-outs
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated superhero special takes place in the Miraculous universe, with a colorful and fast moving fantasy tone, but it carries more tension than a lighter standalone episode. The main sensitive elements come from stylized action scenes, chase sequences, time travel danger, a mysterious villain, and the threat surrounding secret identities, along with a few emotionally loaded references to loss, control, and pressure. The content stays non graphic and clearly fictional, yet the pace is intense and several scenes may unsettle younger viewers, especially children who are sensitive to dark visuals, timeline confusion, or the idea that the heroine could fail. For children already comfortable with Miraculous, it is usually manageable from around age 7, though parents may still want to watch along and help explain the time travel stakes, the secret identity tension, and the reassuring limits of the fantasy world.
Synopsis
To save the future from a terrible fate, Marinette becomes Chronobug and teams up with Bunnyx to defeat a mysterious opponent who travels through time.
Difficult scenes
The story centers on a threat that travels through time and tries to disrupt the heroine's fate. This creates several chase and urgency driven scenes, with a countdown feeling that may be intense for younger children, especially because the characters speak about a future in danger and the possible collapse of their usual world. Marinette faces an opponent whose goal is connected to exposing secret identities. For children who are strongly attached to the characters, this can create real emotional tension, because it involves safety, trust, and the fear that the heroine's private life could be revealed. As in much of Miraculous, there are stylized fights, transformations, and moments of peril without realistic injuries or bloody imagery. Even within this clearly cartoon framework, the quick editing, flashy effects, and repeated obstacles may overwhelm or unsettle more sensitive viewers, especially those who dislike frequent conflict scenes. The special also carries an emotional background linked to the burden of hero responsibilities and to themes of loss already present in the franchise. These elements do not dominate the whole story, but they add moments of seriousness that may lead children to ask questions about failure, separation, or the consequences of difficult choices.
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
- 2024
- Runtime
- 50m
- Countries
- France
- Original language
- FR
- Directed by
- Thomas Astruc
- Main cast
- Anouck Hautbois, Marie Nonnenmacher, Benjamin Bollen, Clara Soares, Marie Chevalot, Antoine Tomé, Martial Le Minoux, Thierry Kazazian, Jessie Lambotte, Alexandre Nguyen
- Studios
- ZAG Entertainment, Method Animation
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated superhero special takes place in the Miraculous universe, with a colorful and fast moving fantasy tone, but it carries more tension than a lighter standalone episode. The main sensitive elements come from stylized action scenes, chase sequences, time travel danger, a mysterious villain, and the threat surrounding secret identities, along with a few emotionally loaded references to loss, control, and pressure. The content stays non graphic and clearly fictional, yet the pace is intense and several scenes may unsettle younger viewers, especially children who are sensitive to dark visuals, timeline confusion, or the idea that the heroine could fail. For children already comfortable with Miraculous, it is usually manageable from around age 7, though parents may still want to watch along and help explain the time travel stakes, the secret identity tension, and the reassuring limits of the fantasy world.
Synopsis
To save the future from a terrible fate, Marinette becomes Chronobug and teams up with Bunnyx to defeat a mysterious opponent who travels through time.
Difficult scenes
The story centers on a threat that travels through time and tries to disrupt the heroine's fate. This creates several chase and urgency driven scenes, with a countdown feeling that may be intense for younger children, especially because the characters speak about a future in danger and the possible collapse of their usual world. Marinette faces an opponent whose goal is connected to exposing secret identities. For children who are strongly attached to the characters, this can create real emotional tension, because it involves safety, trust, and the fear that the heroine's private life could be revealed. As in much of Miraculous, there are stylized fights, transformations, and moments of peril without realistic injuries or bloody imagery. Even within this clearly cartoon framework, the quick editing, flashy effects, and repeated obstacles may overwhelm or unsettle more sensitive viewers, especially those who dislike frequent conflict scenes. The special also carries an emotional background linked to the burden of hero responsibilities and to themes of loss already present in the franchise. These elements do not dominate the whole story, but they add moments of seriousness that may lead children to ask questions about failure, separation, or the consequences of difficult choices.