


Woody Woodpecker Goes to Camp


Woody Woodpecker Goes to Camp
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Watch-outs
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
1/5
Mild
Narrative complexity
2/5
Moderate
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This family comedy mixes live action and cartoon energy, creating a very busy and silly camp setting where rivalry between camps drives most of the story. The main sensitive elements are comic fights, sabotage, brief peril, a villain using a false identity, and some discouraging comments tied to the camp's repeated failures. The intensity stays moderate and highly stylized, with no graphic injury and no truly dark tone, but the repeated chases, traps, unusual weapons, and threat of camp closure may unsettle very young children or viewers who take conflict literally. For most children, it should be broadly suitable from about age 6, with stronger engagement around age 7 when they can better follow the fast comic chaos and plot twists. Parents of sensitive viewers may want to explain that the action is cartoonish, that the fake chef is a comic style villain, and that the story mainly celebrates teamwork, confidence, and creative problem solving.
Synopsis
After getting kicked out of the forest, Woody thinks he's found a forever home at Camp Woo Hoo — until an inspector threatens to shut down the camp.
Difficult scenes
Woody regularly causes very cartoonish physical chaos, including chases, collisions, falls, and comic scuffles. These moments do not show realistic injury, but the pace is fast and may feel overwhelming for a child who dislikes noisy disorder or constant conflict. An escaped convict enters the story and pretends to be a cook in order to fool others and pursue a hidden treasure. This disguised criminal idea is handled in a light comedic way, but it still adds a layer of deception and mild threat that could worry very young viewers. Several scenes involve sabotage between the camps, along with a competition where some children feel useless, embarrassed, or discouraged because they keep losing. It is not harsh in a realistic sense, but the theme of low self esteem and implied ridicule may affect children who are sensitive to rejection. In the more action heavy stretch of the film, characters are locked up, chased, threatened with a comic style arsenal, and placed in moderate danger, especially around a kitchen, a freezer, and a final struggle to protect the camp. The presentation remains family friendly and non graphic, but this is the most intense part of the movie.
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
- 2024
- Runtime
- 1h 40m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Studios
- Universal 1440 Entertainment, Universal Animation Studios, Universal Pictures
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
1/5
Mild
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
1/5
Mild
Narrative complexity
2/5
Moderate
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This family comedy mixes live action and cartoon energy, creating a very busy and silly camp setting where rivalry between camps drives most of the story. The main sensitive elements are comic fights, sabotage, brief peril, a villain using a false identity, and some discouraging comments tied to the camp's repeated failures. The intensity stays moderate and highly stylized, with no graphic injury and no truly dark tone, but the repeated chases, traps, unusual weapons, and threat of camp closure may unsettle very young children or viewers who take conflict literally. For most children, it should be broadly suitable from about age 6, with stronger engagement around age 7 when they can better follow the fast comic chaos and plot twists. Parents of sensitive viewers may want to explain that the action is cartoonish, that the fake chef is a comic style villain, and that the story mainly celebrates teamwork, confidence, and creative problem solving.
Synopsis
After getting kicked out of the forest, Woody thinks he's found a forever home at Camp Woo Hoo — until an inspector threatens to shut down the camp.
Difficult scenes
Woody regularly causes very cartoonish physical chaos, including chases, collisions, falls, and comic scuffles. These moments do not show realistic injury, but the pace is fast and may feel overwhelming for a child who dislikes noisy disorder or constant conflict. An escaped convict enters the story and pretends to be a cook in order to fool others and pursue a hidden treasure. This disguised criminal idea is handled in a light comedic way, but it still adds a layer of deception and mild threat that could worry very young viewers. Several scenes involve sabotage between the camps, along with a competition where some children feel useless, embarrassed, or discouraged because they keep losing. It is not harsh in a realistic sense, but the theme of low self esteem and implied ridicule may affect children who are sensitive to rejection. In the more action heavy stretch of the film, characters are locked up, chased, threatened with a comic style arsenal, and placed in moderate danger, especially around a kitchen, a freezer, and a final struggle to protect the camp. The presentation remains family friendly and non graphic, but this is the most intense part of the movie.