
Elemental
2023 · Directed by Peter Sohn
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Based
Critics rated this 25 points above its woke score. Among Based films, this critic score ranks #216 of 345.
Representation Casting
Score: 35/100
Diverse voice casting with Leah Lewis and Mamoudou Athie in lead roles demonstrates commitment to representation, though the impact is limited in animation where visual identity is not apparent.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 5/100
No LGBTQ+ themes or representation present in the film. The central relationship is a heterosexual romance between Ember and Wade.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 45/100
Ember is an active, determined female protagonist who drives much of the plot, but her characterization doesn't advance particularly bold or subversive feminist ideas.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 40/100
The film's allegory of elemental segregation can be read as commentary on racial division and prejudice, though it remains at the level of gentle allegory rather than pointed social critique.
Climate Crusade
Score: 25/100
While the film involves elemental themes, it engages with infrastructure and cooperation rather than environmental activism or climate consciousness.
Eat the Rich
Score: 30/100
The film touches on bureaucratic systems and social structures, but lacks sustained critique of capitalism or wealth inequality.
Body Positivity
Score: 10/100
The characters are animated elements without traditional bodies, making body diversity or positivity messaging largely irrelevant to the film's design.
Neurodivergence
Score: 15/100
Wade exhibits anxious and risk-averse personality traits, but these are not explicitly framed as neurodivergence or explored with meaningful depth.
Revisionist History
Score: 0/100
The film contains no historical content to revise, existing entirely within a fictional fantasy world of elemental beings.
Lecture Energy
Score: 35/100
The film communicates messages about prejudice and cross-community understanding through narrative rather than direct character lectures, avoiding heavy-handed moralizing.
Synopsis
In a city where fire, water, land and air residents live together, a fiery young woman and a go-with-the-flow guy will discover something elemental: how much they have in common.
Consciousness Assessment
Elemental arrives as a Pixar film that contains the apparatus of contemporary social consciousness without fully committing to its implications. The film presents a segregated world divided by elemental identity, and its central narrative concerns the prejudice and misunderstanding that arise from these arbitrary divisions. Leah Lewis voices Ember, a determined fire resident, while Mamoudou Athie provides the voice for Wade, a water-based bureaucrat, and their unlikely partnership serves as the engine for the plot's examination of cross-community understanding.
Yet the film's engagement with these themes remains fundamentally aesthetic rather than substantive. The allegory of elemental segregation gestures toward commentary on systemic prejudice without exploring the mechanics of oppression or power structures with any real depth. Ember is an active and capable protagonist, but her characterization doesn't advance particularly bold feminist ideas beyond the baseline requirement that female characters possess agency. The diverse voice casting represents a genuine commitment to representation in a medium where such choices matter, though the animation itself remains neutral on questions of visual diversity.
The film has absorbed the vocabulary of social consciousness without the intensity that would elevate it beyond pleasant messaging. Pixar avoids heavy-handed preachiness, which is to its credit, but this restraint also means it avoids saying anything that might genuinely trouble a viewer or challenge assumptions about how segregation perpetuates itself. What results is a family film comfortable with affirming that prejudice is bad while offering few insights into why it persists or how it might be meaningfully addressed.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“Elemental isn't essential, but it's a fascinating if limited portrait of the diversity of eco-warriordom today.”
“While written epilogues provide upbeat updates on the subjects’ endeavors, the overall impression is one of a draining uphill struggle for relatively little personal reward given the enormous stakes involved in the planet’s continued ecological destruction.”
“More than some run-of-the-mill social-awareness doc, the film pays as much attention to the personal and emotional strife of its subjects as it does to their activism.”
“The filmmakers behind Elemental might have done better to commit to a single portrait and been more fearless about avoiding familiar oratory, but small steps are progress too.”
Consciousness Markers
Diverse voice casting with Leah Lewis and Mamoudou Athie in lead roles demonstrates commitment to representation, though the impact is limited in animation where visual identity is not apparent.
No LGBTQ+ themes or representation present in the film. The central relationship is a heterosexual romance between Ember and Wade.
Ember is an active, determined female protagonist who drives much of the plot, but her characterization doesn't advance particularly bold or subversive feminist ideas.
The film's allegory of elemental segregation can be read as commentary on racial division and prejudice, though it remains at the level of gentle allegory rather than pointed social critique.
While the film involves elemental themes, it engages with infrastructure and cooperation rather than environmental activism or climate consciousness.
The film touches on bureaucratic systems and social structures, but lacks sustained critique of capitalism or wealth inequality.
The characters are animated elements without traditional bodies, making body diversity or positivity messaging largely irrelevant to the film's design.
Wade exhibits anxious and risk-averse personality traits, but these are not explicitly framed as neurodivergence or explored with meaningful depth.
The film contains no historical content to revise, existing entirely within a fictional fantasy world of elemental beings.
The film communicates messages about prejudice and cross-community understanding through narrative rather than direct character lectures, avoiding heavy-handed moralizing.