
Team Umizoomi: Animal Heroes

Team Umizoomi: Animal Heroes
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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
Team Umizoomi: Animal Heroes is a very young children oriented adventure compilation built around simple, colorful, reassuring missions where animals need help. The sensitive content is limited to brief moments of mild peril, such as an animal being lost, stuck, or temporarily separated, along with light tension created by the need to solve a problem quickly. The intensity stays very low throughout, with no real violence, no lasting scary villain, no coarse language, and no adult material. Its interactive and repetitive structure is designed to feel safe for small children, although very sensitive viewers may still react when an animal appears distressed before being helped soon afterward. For parents, this is a gentle preschool watch, especially suitable if your child enjoys participating, counting, spotting clues, and being reassured quickly after a short moment of concern.
Synopsis
Team up with Team Umizoomi on four fantastic animal missions! Help Milli, Geo, and Bot get Purple Monkey to his new Monkey Jungle home at the zoo, rescue Buster the dog at a construction site, fix the Cuckoo Bears' clock, and find six baby chicks!
Difficult scenes
In the story where the team helps a monkey reach its new home at the zoo, the main emotional tension comes from the animal being moved into an unfamiliar place. A young child may feel slight concern about the transition and the possibility of the monkey getting lost, even though the tone stays warm and very reassuring. During the rescue of the dog at a construction site, the building setting may feel a little intense for very sensitive viewers because it suggests obstacles and a less secure place than a home or playground. The scene remains calm and educational, with no injury or realistic threat, and it resolves quickly through teamwork and problem solving.
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
- 2013
- Runtime
- 1h 31m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Studios
- Nickelodeon Animation Studio, Curious Pictures
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
Team Umizoomi: Animal Heroes is a very young children oriented adventure compilation built around simple, colorful, reassuring missions where animals need help. The sensitive content is limited to brief moments of mild peril, such as an animal being lost, stuck, or temporarily separated, along with light tension created by the need to solve a problem quickly. The intensity stays very low throughout, with no real violence, no lasting scary villain, no coarse language, and no adult material. Its interactive and repetitive structure is designed to feel safe for small children, although very sensitive viewers may still react when an animal appears distressed before being helped soon afterward. For parents, this is a gentle preschool watch, especially suitable if your child enjoys participating, counting, spotting clues, and being reassured quickly after a short moment of concern.
Synopsis
Team up with Team Umizoomi on four fantastic animal missions! Help Milli, Geo, and Bot get Purple Monkey to his new Monkey Jungle home at the zoo, rescue Buster the dog at a construction site, fix the Cuckoo Bears' clock, and find six baby chicks!
Difficult scenes
In the story where the team helps a monkey reach its new home at the zoo, the main emotional tension comes from the animal being moved into an unfamiliar place. A young child may feel slight concern about the transition and the possibility of the monkey getting lost, even though the tone stays warm and very reassuring. During the rescue of the dog at a construction site, the building setting may feel a little intense for very sensitive viewers because it suggests obstacles and a less secure place than a home or playground. The scene remains calm and educational, with no injury or realistic threat, and it resolves quickly through teamwork and problem solving.