Video game bad guy Ralph and fellow misfit Vanellope von Schweetz must risk it all by traveling to the World Wide Web in search of a replacement part to save Vanellope's video game, Sugar Rush. In way over their heads, Ralph and Vanellope rely on the citizens of the internet — the netizens — to help navigate their way, including an entrepreneur named Yesss, who is the head algorithm and the heart and soul of trend-making site BuzzzTube.
This movie contains 15 potentially triggering events.
The main characters are about to be attacked by a vicious dog which is then promptly eaten whole by a shark. It is not gory, just surprising. Later, the main character meets the shark again and its mouth opens to reveal dogs comically singing inside, because it's a video game and nothing really dies, just resets.
Still though, a dog gets eaten by a shark so it sort of counts.
There are no pregnancies or births. I don't remember seeing any babies, but someone has clicked Yes under the question "Does a baby cry?", so maybe I missed one.
All the characters in the game Sugar Rush are in danger of being deleted when the game is tossed, so they flee the game and have no other homes for a while. Most of them are soon taken in by characters from other games; only Vanellope is left, and she goes on a quest to save the game. In the end, everyone has a home (game). We don't see anyone living on the streets.
In a mid-credit scene, the protagonists visit a game for little kids which involves feeding a cartoon bunny pancakes. They feed the bunny way too much and it is visibly distressed. It's not actually a pet but it's a cute furry animal and it's weirdly disturbing.
No; a man (Ralph) is encouraged to be, and commended and rewarded for being, aware of his own emotions and openly dealing with his insecurity and sense of loss.
Yes there’s an end credit scene but it is disturbing and has nothing to do with the plot. Ralph over feeds a bunny to the point the bunny is sad and uncomfortable, and explodes. This scene is upsetting and is completely unnecessary. It begins after the credits end.
In the scene where Shank is introduced, one of her goons uses flamethrowers to destroy two gamers (it is shown off-screen, and the gamers themselves are not physically harmed when their avatars are killed)
The concept of game characters interacting with the real world via the Internet could seem similar to breaking the fourth wall, but it all exists within a cartoon universe except for a very brief clip where the audience is directly addressed at the very very end of the credits.
There are no pregnancies or births. I don't remember seeing any babies, but someone has clicked Yes under the question "Does a baby cry?", so maybe I missed one.
There are no pregnancies or births. I don't remember seeing any babies, but someone has clicked Yes under the question "Does a baby cry?", so maybe I missed one.
There are no pregnancies or births. I don't remember seeing any babies, but someone has clicked Yes under the question "Does a baby cry?", so maybe I missed one.
There are no pregnancies or births. I don't remember seeing any babies, but someone has clicked Yes under the question "Does a baby cry?", so maybe I missed one.
There are no pregnancies or births. I don't remember seeing any babies, but someone has clicked Yes under the question "Does a baby cry?", so maybe I missed one.
I'll have to say yes. Cinderella has her mice sew a dress to catch Ralph in when he's falling - it's attached to four other dresses that will act like parachutes. Ralph falls into the dress, so that he's wearing it, then lands in a bed on a rooftop, unconscious. When he wakes up, he's surrounded by the Disney princesses who saved him. He sits up in bed, and part of the dress slides up to reveal some of his belly. He says, "This dress wasn't made for a big boy", then adjusts it so his entire belly is bared, and says, "That's better". I assume the whole thing is supposed to be funny, which one might consider objectionable. However, I want to mention that Ralph stresses the word "big", not the word "boy", in the first sentence, thereby sort of implying that there'd be nothing wrong or unusual about making a dress for a boy. I consider that a somewhat mitigating factor. Also, no one in the movie makes fun at him or mocks him for being in the dress.
There is a car crash that leaves the character unconscious as well as several others that are portrayed as less serious (spinning off the road, flipping the hover car)
The main characters are about to be attacked by a vicious dog which is then promptly eaten whole by a shark. It is not gory, just surprising. Later, the main character meets the shark again and its mouth opens to reveal dogs comically singing inside, because it's a video game and nothing really dies, just resets.
Still though, a dog gets eaten by a shark so it sort of counts.