


Sing 2


Sing 2
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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
2/5
Moderate
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
Sing 2 is a lively animated musical made for broad family viewing, with upbeat songs, visual comedy, and strong messages about confidence and teamwork. The sensitive material is moderate, but it includes a clearly threatening villain, a few believable physical threats, a high altitude danger moment, and an emotional subplot involving grief and fear of performing again. These elements are occasional within an otherwise bright and reassuring story, with no graphic violence and no sexual content, yet some younger children may still be unsettled by Jimmy Crystal's anger, by the idea that a character could be hurt, or by references to a spouse's death. For most children, the film is suitable from about age 6, especially if they already handle slightly intense animated adventures well. Watching together can help parents reassure children during the threat scenes, put the grief theme into simple words, and highlight the film's emphasis on courage, kindness, and perseverance.
Synopsis
Buster and his new cast now have their sights set on debuting a new show at the Crystal Tower Theater in glamorous Redshore City. But with no connections, he and his singers must sneak into the Crystal Entertainment offices, run by the ruthless wolf mogul Jimmy Crystal, where the gang pitches the ridiculous idea of casting the lion rock legend Clay Calloway in their show. Buster must embark on a quest to find the now-isolated Clay and persuade him to return to the stage.
Difficult scenes
Jimmy Crystal is portrayed as a controlling and intimidating producer who directly threatens Buster once he learns he has been misled. One scene in which he explodes in anger, smashes a screen, and places Buster in physical danger may unsettle young viewers, even though the presentation stays stylized and no injury is shown. Clay Calloway has withdrawn from the world after the death of his wife, and his grief is discussed clearly in several scenes. This theme is not handled in a heavy way, but it adds a more emotional layer that may prompt questions from children who are sensitive to loss or sadness. Rosita has to confront her fear of heights during a rehearsal, with a clear sense of danger and panic around a high jump. The sequence is brief and softened by humor, but it may strongly resonate with children who are afraid of falling or of high places. Miss Crawly visits Clay and is chased away in a comic but sudden sequence that includes him firing a paintball gun at her. The scene is playful in tone, yet the pursuit and her frightened reaction could be startling for very young children.
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
- 2021
- Runtime
- 1h 50m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Studios
- Illumination
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
2/5
Moderate
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
Sing 2 is a lively animated musical made for broad family viewing, with upbeat songs, visual comedy, and strong messages about confidence and teamwork. The sensitive material is moderate, but it includes a clearly threatening villain, a few believable physical threats, a high altitude danger moment, and an emotional subplot involving grief and fear of performing again. These elements are occasional within an otherwise bright and reassuring story, with no graphic violence and no sexual content, yet some younger children may still be unsettled by Jimmy Crystal's anger, by the idea that a character could be hurt, or by references to a spouse's death. For most children, the film is suitable from about age 6, especially if they already handle slightly intense animated adventures well. Watching together can help parents reassure children during the threat scenes, put the grief theme into simple words, and highlight the film's emphasis on courage, kindness, and perseverance.
Synopsis
Buster and his new cast now have their sights set on debuting a new show at the Crystal Tower Theater in glamorous Redshore City. But with no connections, he and his singers must sneak into the Crystal Entertainment offices, run by the ruthless wolf mogul Jimmy Crystal, where the gang pitches the ridiculous idea of casting the lion rock legend Clay Calloway in their show. Buster must embark on a quest to find the now-isolated Clay and persuade him to return to the stage.
Difficult scenes
Jimmy Crystal is portrayed as a controlling and intimidating producer who directly threatens Buster once he learns he has been misled. One scene in which he explodes in anger, smashes a screen, and places Buster in physical danger may unsettle young viewers, even though the presentation stays stylized and no injury is shown. Clay Calloway has withdrawn from the world after the death of his wife, and his grief is discussed clearly in several scenes. This theme is not handled in a heavy way, but it adds a more emotional layer that may prompt questions from children who are sensitive to loss or sadness. Rosita has to confront her fear of heights during a rehearsal, with a clear sense of danger and panic around a high jump. The sequence is brief and softened by humor, but it may strongly resonate with children who are afraid of falling or of high places. Miss Crawly visits Clay and is chased away in a comic but sudden sequence that includes him firing a paintball gun at her. The scene is playful in tone, yet the pursuit and her frightened reaction could be startling for very young children.