Parents' Guide to African Cats

Movie G 2011 90 minutes
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Common Sense Media Review

Sandie Angulo Chen By Sandie Angulo Chen , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 6+

Nature docu emphasizes a mother's love and sacrifice.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 6+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 9+

Based on 24 parent reviews

Parents say this movie beautifully captures the lives of African wildlife but contains intense, emotional scenes that may be too upsetting for young children, with many reviews highlighting the deaths of key animal characters. While intended to be family-friendly, numerous viewers suggest caution for sensitive children due to overwhelming themes of loss and survival, which could lead to distress during or after viewing.

  • beautiful imagery
  • intense emotional scenes
  • not suitable for young children
  • caution advised
  • many deaths portrayed
  • family-friendly themes
Summarized with AI

age 11+

Based on 26 kid reviews

What's the Story?

In Disneynature's third feature-length wildlife documentary, filmmakers Alastair Fothergill and Keith Scholey follow two animal mothers living in Kenya's Masai Mara National Reserve: Sita, a cheetah trying to raise five newborn cubs by herself, and Layla, an older lioness with a 6-month-old cub called Mara. Fothergill and Scholey's team spent two and a half years following the AFRICAN CATS to focus on the two felines as they overcome daily threats and dangers to raise their cubs. Layla is helped by her sister lionesses and an alpha lion, whereas Sita must fend for herself and keep the predatory hyenas and unrelated male cheetahs away from her cubs. If they're successful and lucky, both mothers will usher their offspring to young adulthood.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say ( 24 ):
Kids say ( 26 ):

Nature documentaries can be broken down into two key elements -- the photography and the narration/story arc -- and the images here are extraordinary. Veteran wildlife specialists Owen Newman and Sophie Darlington were the directors of photography for this film, and it's obvious they patiently waited for just the right shots. We get the expected hunting scenes that show Sita running with such beauty and elegance that you don't really care that she's about to down an equally elegant but not quite as fast gazelle. But there's also a lovely, domestic touch to the smaller scenes, whether it's of Sita's three remaining cubs playing with each other or standing their ground against bullying hyenas, or of the pride of lionesses and their cubs lounging on a flat rock and grooming each other.

As for the narration, Samuel L. Jackson tackles it with precision and heart. The script he reads is heavy-handed with the humanizing -- painting the mothers in such a way that we all think of them as the "good guys" and their animal kingdom enemies as the "bad guys." But it works for the purposes of this story, to make everyone think of the universality of motherhood and how even our counterparts in the wild will stop at nothing to get their kids safely to self sufficiency. Food, shelter, experience -- these are things that all mothers try to provide, and watching Sita and Layla do it with their feline kidlets is a satisfying, if at times heartbreaking, endeavor.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the popularity of wildlife documentaries. What attracts families to nature films?

  • Does humanizing the animals in movies like this one make them more or less likable? Is it right that some are depicted as "good" and some as "evil"? Aren't all the animals just acting like animals?

  • Some criticize G-rated documentaries for depicting the way that animals hunt and (in some scenes) die. Do you think that kind of content is appropriate for all audiences?

Movie Details

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