Parents' Guide to

Abominable

By Sandie Angulo Chen, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 8+

Funny, heartwarming adventure has some peril, scares.

Movie PG 2019 97 minutes
Abominable Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you willā€”and won'tā€”find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 5+

Based on 28 parent reviews

age 8+

Put away the weapons!

I find it disappointing that so many childrenā€™s movies involve so much explicit violence with high powered weapons, and this movie is no exception . Mass shootings with high powered weaponry is one of the glaring blights of America and it is galling to see an otherwise entertaining film with so much gun violence. I am the grandparent of a 6 year old - not the parent
age 12+

Imaginative, Creative, Appropriate, Entertaining, Great, Fun, Enjoyable.........

This is a movie that engages your brain to entertain. Yes, there is a message of love, finding yourself, acceptance......yadda yadda yadda but this movie is ENTERTAINING! THIS movie is gorgeous. This movie has a defined plot and story that do not go on and on and on and on into eternity. The characters are pretty well defined and developed (it's a kid's movie to be fair). It shows that if they want, they can create a movie like the old days without politics, without innuendo of current issues. It's a story about a girl who helps a Yeti and figures out some things about herself and her friends who go with her. It is so nice and so good.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (28 ):
Kids say (25 ):

This animated adventure is sweet and entertaining enough to keep viewers amused, and it shares a bit about Chinese culture and underlines the importance of family, friendship, and teamwork. Everest's story is reminiscent of several other films about kids/people who find, protect, and commune with an unusual animal/creature/alien, but the twist of setting the film in Shanghai provides a window into the universe of three Chinese kids. They live in a high-rise apartment building, can ride a motorbike, and know how to get around on their own -- just as you'd expect from teens in the most populated city in the world. Everest the yeti might be a mythical creature, but the teen characters don't just seem authentic --- they're all voiced by Asian actors or actors of Asian descent. (One bonus piece of trivia: Trainor, the voice of Jin, is the grandson of legendary climber Tenzing Norgay, who -- along with Sir Edmund Hillary -- was the first to summit Mt. Everest.)

Izzard's villain, Mr. Burnish, is reminiscent of Up's Charles F. Muntz. Burnish has been on a lifelong mission to prove that he did indeed see a yeti when he was a young explorer. But it's his shady head zoologist, Dr. Zara, who's more fascinating. Her interest in Everest proves even more Machiavellian than that of her boss. Everest isn't a musical, but it does include key musical moments, from Everest's supernatural chant to Yi's prodigy-level violin playing and climactic use of the Coldplay song "Fix You" (both as an instrumental and with lyrics). The movie's impressive animation and the deeper storyline should ultimately appeal to older tweens and teens as well as to younger viewers who are in it for the silly physical comedy.

Movie Details

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