Animated / Children
2023 / 87 minutes
Rating: 8/10
This sequel to 2021’s PAW Patrol: The Movie is bigger, maybe better, and certainly more intense. This time, things begin with a bang: the pups’ headquarters is destroyed by a meteor, drawn to earth by the miscalculations of mad scientist Victoria Vance. Soon after the pups discover the meteorite houses seven different crystals – one for each pup – that give them all different superpowers.
- Chase is super fast
- Marshall can produce and shoot fire
- Skye can fly and is super strong
- Rubble can become a wrecking ball
- Rocky has the power of magnetism
- Zuma can become, and can control, water
- Liberty (eventually) learns she is super stretchy
The pups remain every bit as helpful and kind as ever, but with these powers, they decide to rebrand. Rubble suggests, “How about ‘The PAW Patrol, but more…with just a little bit extra,'” but his buddies aren’t convinced. They settle on “The Mighty Pups.”
There are two bad guys this time around, with the mad scientist paired with the corrupt Mayor Humdinger from the last movie. The two of them engineer a jail break and set out to steal the pups’ super-power crystals.
Cautions
Two most notable cautions here: the first is that this is sure to be too intense for the lower end of its 4 to 10-year-old target audience. A giant-ified mayor repeatedly tries stepping on and squashing the pups, and the mad scientist keeps firing off lightning bolts (it has to be for 10 minutes straight), so the peril for our heroes is sure heightened compared to the TV show. At the 75-minute mark, Skye, briefly, even seems to die (though about a minute later, we learn she was just knocked out).
The other significant caution concerns not what is in this film, but what’s happened in the extended PAW Patrol Universe. Producers introduced a “non-binary” character into a September 2023 episode of a Paw Patrol spin-off show, Rubble & Crew. So if your kids are able to watch a movie and enjoy it on its own, without needing to explore the universe behind it, great. But if they start telling their friends, uncritically, that Paw Patrol is awesome, then they aren’t ready to see this. And I don’t know that many little kids will be that mature.
Language concerns would be limited to “My goodness.”
Conclusion
What do we do with familiar favorites that go woke? PAW Patrol has been a parental favorite for years because of all the admirable qualities the pups and their human “dad” exhibit: teamwork, perseverance, loyalty, bravery, self-sacrifice, and love for each other and their city. But then that love – rooted not in God’s wisdom, but simply the producers’ feelings – has them promoting non-gender nonsense to kids. That’s not loving; that’s going to harm confused kids.
Thankfully, this nonsense doesn’t show up in The Mighty Movie, but is what’s good in this film reason enough to watch it, knowing what’s going on elsewhere in the PAW Patrol universe?
You can check out the trailer below.