


Rapunzel's Tangled Adventure


Rapunzel's Tangled Adventure
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Watch-outs
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
1/5
Accessible
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated adventure series extends the world of Tangled with a bright, family friendly tone that is often funny, while adding more mystery, travel, and fantasy peril than a show made for very young children. The main sensitive material comes from stylized fights, chases, magical threats, betrayals between characters, and a few darker villains whose presence may unsettle sensitive viewers. The action stays non graphic and clearly fantastical, yet suspense appears regularly across the story, and the mythology can feel more intense than the colorful visuals suggest. There are also some fairly traditional role patterns around the princess, the protector, and marriage, without overtaking the whole series, so parents may still wish to talk briefly about gender stereotypes if that matters to their child. For most children, it becomes genuinely engaging and comfortable around age 6, especially if they already know the film and can handle recurring fantasy danger.
Synopsis
Set between “Tangled” and “Tangled Ever After,” this animated adventure/comedy series unfolds as Rapunzel acquaints herself with her parents, her kingdom and the people of Corona.
Difficult scenes
At the start of the series, Rapunzel struggles with her father's overprotection and secretly leaves the castle with Cassandra. This section can affect younger children because it mixes family conflict, disobedience, and the sudden discovery of magical black rocks, creating a sense of danger that continues in later episodes. Several episodes include fights with enemies, chase scenes, and situations where the heroes may be captured or hurt. The presentation stays firmly cartoon styled, with no blood or realistic injury detail, yet the fast pace and repeated threats may still overwhelm or unsettle an anxious child. As the story develops, friendships are tested by secrets, jealousy, and a major betrayal. Even without very harsh scenes, this emotional material may be more upsetting than the action itself for children who become strongly attached to the characters. The mythology involving magical powers, black rocks, the Dark Kingdom, and an ancient demonic force creates a darker atmosphere than the original film. Some designs and revelations can look scary, especially near episode endings, even though the series usually returns to a reassuring heroic tone afterward.
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
- 2017
- Runtime
- 22m
- Countries
- United States of America, Mexico
- Original language
- EN
- Directed by
- Chris Sonnenburg, Shane Prigmore
- Main cast
- Mandy Moore, Zachary Levi, Julie Bowen, Clancy Brown, Eden Espinosa
- Studios
- Disney Television Animation, 9 Story Media Group
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
1/5
Accessible
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated adventure series extends the world of Tangled with a bright, family friendly tone that is often funny, while adding more mystery, travel, and fantasy peril than a show made for very young children. The main sensitive material comes from stylized fights, chases, magical threats, betrayals between characters, and a few darker villains whose presence may unsettle sensitive viewers. The action stays non graphic and clearly fantastical, yet suspense appears regularly across the story, and the mythology can feel more intense than the colorful visuals suggest. There are also some fairly traditional role patterns around the princess, the protector, and marriage, without overtaking the whole series, so parents may still wish to talk briefly about gender stereotypes if that matters to their child. For most children, it becomes genuinely engaging and comfortable around age 6, especially if they already know the film and can handle recurring fantasy danger.
Synopsis
Set between “Tangled” and “Tangled Ever After,” this animated adventure/comedy series unfolds as Rapunzel acquaints herself with her parents, her kingdom and the people of Corona.
Difficult scenes
At the start of the series, Rapunzel struggles with her father's overprotection and secretly leaves the castle with Cassandra. This section can affect younger children because it mixes family conflict, disobedience, and the sudden discovery of magical black rocks, creating a sense of danger that continues in later episodes. Several episodes include fights with enemies, chase scenes, and situations where the heroes may be captured or hurt. The presentation stays firmly cartoon styled, with no blood or realistic injury detail, yet the fast pace and repeated threats may still overwhelm or unsettle an anxious child. As the story develops, friendships are tested by secrets, jealousy, and a major betrayal. Even without very harsh scenes, this emotional material may be more upsetting than the action itself for children who become strongly attached to the characters. The mythology involving magical powers, black rocks, the Dark Kingdom, and an ancient demonic force creates a darker atmosphere than the original film. Some designs and revelations can look scary, especially near episode endings, even though the series usually returns to a reassuring heroic tone afterward.