


The Angry Birds Movie 3


The Angry Birds Movie 3
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What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
1/5
Mild
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
1/5
Mild
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
The Angry Birds Movie 3 appears to be a child oriented animated comedy adventure set in a highly stylized world where conflict is usually played for laughs rather than realism. Because a full plot is not yet available, this assessment relies mainly on the previous films in the franchise, which typically include slapstick action, chases, crashes, mild peril, teasing, and some rude behavior, without graphic injury or clear adult material. The likely intensity is low to mild, though energetic scenes may appear regularly and a few moments of tension could briefly unsettle very sensitive viewers. For parents, this looks broadly suitable for young children who already handle fast paced cartoon conflict, with co viewing especially helpful around ages 5 or 6 to explain that the danger is exaggerated and comedic. The algorithmic baseline of age 4 seems slightly low for sustained engagement, since the noise level and adventure pacing will probably work better for children who are a little older.
Synopsis
The third installment in The Angry Birds Movie franchise. Plot TBA
Difficult scenes
As in the earlier films, several scenes will likely depend on fast chases, launched objects, comic crashes, and exaggerated falls. These moments are usually consequence free in a cartoon sense, but the noisy and hectic pacing may still unsettle very sensitive children or viewers who are new to adventure animation. The franchise often builds comedy around arguments, irritation, competitive behavior, and mild verbal teasing. This remains light overall, yet younger children may copy some of the rude language or feel uncomfortable when characters shout frequently and act angry toward one another.
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
- Countries
- Finland, Japan, United States of America, India, Hong Kong, United Kingdom
- Original language
- EN
- Directed by
- John Rice
- Main cast
- Jason Sudeikis, Josh Gad, Rachel Bloom, Danny McBride, Anthony Padilla, Ian Hecox, Emma Myers, Keke Palmer, Tim Robinson, Lily James
- Studios
- Rovio Animation, SEGA of America, Flywheel Media, One Cool Films, dentsu, AB3 Investments, Prime Focus Studios, DNEG
Content barometer
Violence
1/5
Mild
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
1/5
Mild
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
The Angry Birds Movie 3 appears to be a child oriented animated comedy adventure set in a highly stylized world where conflict is usually played for laughs rather than realism. Because a full plot is not yet available, this assessment relies mainly on the previous films in the franchise, which typically include slapstick action, chases, crashes, mild peril, teasing, and some rude behavior, without graphic injury or clear adult material. The likely intensity is low to mild, though energetic scenes may appear regularly and a few moments of tension could briefly unsettle very sensitive viewers. For parents, this looks broadly suitable for young children who already handle fast paced cartoon conflict, with co viewing especially helpful around ages 5 or 6 to explain that the danger is exaggerated and comedic. The algorithmic baseline of age 4 seems slightly low for sustained engagement, since the noise level and adventure pacing will probably work better for children who are a little older.
Synopsis
The third installment in The Angry Birds Movie franchise. Plot TBA
Difficult scenes
As in the earlier films, several scenes will likely depend on fast chases, launched objects, comic crashes, and exaggerated falls. These moments are usually consequence free in a cartoon sense, but the noisy and hectic pacing may still unsettle very sensitive children or viewers who are new to adventure animation. The franchise often builds comedy around arguments, irritation, competitive behavior, and mild verbal teasing. This remains light overall, yet younger children may copy some of the rude language or feel uncomfortable when characters shout frequently and act angry toward one another.