After being shipwrecked, the Robinson family is marooned on an island inhabited only by an impressive array of wildlife. In true pioneer spirit, they quickly make themselves at home but soon face a danger even greater than nature: dastardly pirates. A rousing adventure suitable for the whole family, this Disney adaptation of the classic Johann Wyss novel stars Dorothy McGuire and John Mills as Mother and Father Robinson.
This movie contains 2 potentially triggering events.
not specifically heads, whole bodies are run over by falling boulders and logs, but there isn’t any gore at all, the logs and boulders are very obviously lightweight props.
There is absolutely no cheating. Brothers are both interested in the same woman, but she is clearly only romantically interested in the older brother, and is simply kind to the younger one.
Not literally crying, and not about a character who is actually male, but some of the things they brothers say about Roberta when they think she's a boy are pretty unpleasant.
Keeping wild animals as pets is abuse in real life, but in the fantasy here, they are not harmed. Things like having a turtle pull a boat, trapping a wild elephant, and riding on an ostrich, There is no malicious abuse. (All the animals on the boat get rescued.)
There is a rather long scene where the two older brothers wrestle with a snake in the water (this is after they meet Roberta and it's easy to see it coming). You never see very much of it at once.
a girl has to pretend to be a boy for her safety, and she is misgendered during the time she is disguised. while she is disguised, fritz and ernst make some rude and inappropriate comments about how feminine a man she is. it’s pretty transphobic and reeks of toxic masculinity.
Disney+ has a disclaimer. There's no hate speech, but the pirates are 2-dimensional racist stereotypes (for no particular reason other than the setting--there's nothing culturally specific about their actions, so they could just as effectively be generic pirates).
Technically the family is homeless when initially shipwrecked, but they soon build a (ridiculously elaborate) home, and they are never without shelter.