

The Pink Panther
Detailed parental analysis
This version of The Pink Panther belongs to a playful cartoon world built around visual gags, chases, and gentle absurdity, and it works best for children who already enjoy classic slapstick comedy. The main sensitive elements are comic falls, crashes, brief danger, and mischievous behavior, with some background ideas of theft and deception connected to the wider franchise, though these are not presented in a realistic or heavy way. The intensity stays low throughout, and consequences are usually erased by the elastic cartoon style, but the steady stream of impacts and surprises may still unsettle very young viewers who take screen conflict literally. There are also some dated gender stereotypes in the broader Pink Panther universe, where female characters can be framed mainly through glamour or seduction, and that can be worth briefly discussing with children. For most families, this is an easy early watch if an adult helps explain that the action is exaggerated for humor and not a model for real behavior.
Synopsis
He's cool, he's pink, he's animated! The Pink Panther is back for more adventures, and he's brought along a few new friends and some old favorites.
Where to watch
Availability checked on Apr 28, 2026
About this title
- Format
- TV series
- Year
- 1993
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Directed by
- Blake Edwards, Friz Freleng, Walter Mirisch, David H. DePatie
- Studios
- Camelot Entertainment Group, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Animation, Claster Television Productions, DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Content barometer
- Violence3/5Notable
- Fear2/5A few scenes
- Sexuality2/5Mild
- Language1/5Mild
- Narrative complexity1/5Accessible
- Adult themes0/5None
Watch-outs
- Sexuality
- Violence
Values conveyed
- humor
- creativity
- playfulness