
Sonic the Hedgehog
2020 · Directed by Jeff Fowler
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Ultra Based
Critics rated this 29 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1218 of 1469.
Representation Casting
Score: 42/100
The cast includes Tika Sumpter as a Black police officer and several actors of color in supporting roles, meeting basic diversity quotas without substantive character development.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 0/100
No LGBTQ+ representation or themes present in the narrative.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 25/100
Women appear in professional roles (police officer, various supporting positions) but receive minimal character development or agency in the plot.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 15/100
The film contains actors of color but demonstrates no meaningful exploration of racial themes or consciousness.
Climate Crusade
Score: 0/100
No environmental or climate-related themes present in the story.
Eat the Rich
Score: 5/100
The villain's motivations are generic and disconnected from any critique of capitalist systems or wealth accumulation.
Body Positivity
Score: 10/100
The film contains no body diversity representation or commentary on physical appearance and acceptance.
Neurodivergence
Score: 0/100
No representation or thematic engagement with neurodivergent characters or experiences.
Revisionist History
Score: 0/100
As a contemporary fantasy action film, the movie contains no historical narrative to revisit or reframe.
Lecture Energy
Score: 15/100
The film contains minimal preachy messaging, though occasional lines about friendship and acceptance emerge without substantial thematic integration.
Synopsis
Powered with incredible speed, Sonic The Hedgehog embraces his new home on Earth. That is, until Sonic sparks the attention of super-uncool evil genius Dr. Robotnik. Now it's super-villain vs. super-sonic in an all-out race across the globe to stop Robotnik from using Sonic's unique power for world domination.
Consciousness Assessment
Sonic the Hedgehog represents the contemporary video game adaptation in its most neutered, focus-grouped form. The film is fundamentally concerned with extracting maximum box office returns from childhood nostalgia, a mission it pursues with the single-minded intensity of its titular character. Any progressive sensibilities present feel incidental rather than intentional, artifacts of casting a diverse ensemble rather than deliberate thematic choices.
The supporting cast includes a Black police officer (Tika Sumpter) and several characters of color in minor roles, but these exist as window dressing in a narrative that remains stubbornly committed to traditional adventure storytelling. The humor, such as it exists, derives from Jim Carrey's unhinged performance and fish-out-of-water scenarios rather than any examination of systemic issues or identity politics. The film's only genuine nod to contemporary sensibilities is the presence of women in positions of authority, though this barely registers as noteworthy in 2020.
The environmental and anti-capitalist messaging that might have elevated this material remains conspicuously absent. Dr. Robotnik's villainy stems from generic mad scientist impulses, not from exploitation or ecological destruction. The film asks nothing of its audience beyond passive consumption and the occasional chuckle. It is a film so determinedly noncommittal that its very existence becomes a kind of cultural statement, albeit an accidental one.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“The little blue alien who can sprint quicker than the speed of light has ironically benefited from slowing it down, taking a pit stop to retool and emerge this month as a total crowd-pleaser.”
“In what is something of a movie miracle or at the very least an unexpected surprise, this adaptation of the much-loved Sega video game franchise launched nearly 30 years ago as a direct assault on Nintendo’s leaping plumber Mario, largely presses the all the right buttons—and even does so in the right order.”
“In the end, “Sonic” is quippy without being mean, and sweet without being sappy, making this a trip that’s well worth taking.”
“This wasn’t a movie, it was a boardroom meeting with some poor hapless dreamer strapped to the “directed by” credit like a keelhauled sailor punished for his idealism.”
Consciousness Markers
The cast includes Tika Sumpter as a Black police officer and several actors of color in supporting roles, meeting basic diversity quotas without substantive character development.
No LGBTQ+ representation or themes present in the narrative.
Women appear in professional roles (police officer, various supporting positions) but receive minimal character development or agency in the plot.
The film contains actors of color but demonstrates no meaningful exploration of racial themes or consciousness.
No environmental or climate-related themes present in the story.
The villain's motivations are generic and disconnected from any critique of capitalist systems or wealth accumulation.
The film contains no body diversity representation or commentary on physical appearance and acceptance.
No representation or thematic engagement with neurodivergent characters or experiences.
As a contemporary fantasy action film, the movie contains no historical narrative to revisit or reframe.
The film contains minimal preachy messaging, though occasional lines about friendship and acceptance emerge without substantial thematic integration.