
The Emperor's New Groove
2000 · Directed by Mark Dindal
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Based
Critics rated this 48 points above its woke score. Among Based films, this critic score ranks #160 of 345.
Representation Casting
Score: 15/100
The voice cast is predominantly white, with minimal representation of actors of color despite the Andean setting. Indigenous characters exist as background elements without meaningful agency.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 5/100
No LGBTQ+ themes or representation present. The film contains no queer subtext or characters of note.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 20/100
Yzma is the sole significant female character, defined primarily by vanity and personal villainy rather than ideology. She is not a feminist figure, though her agency as a villain provides some agency.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 10/100
The film treats Incan culture as decorative rather than subject to serious examination. No meaningful exploration of colonialism, indigenous identity, or racial power dynamics.
Climate Crusade
Score: 0/100
No environmental themes or climate consciousness present. The natural world serves purely as setting.
Eat the Rich
Score: 35/100
The film critiques individual greed and teaches wealth-sharing, but this operates through personal redemption rather than systemic critique. The solution is individual moral reform, not structural change.
Body Positivity
Score: 0/100
No body positivity messaging present. The transformation into a llama is treated as humiliation and punishment rather than celebration of alternative forms.
Neurodivergence
Score: 0/100
No representation of or commentary on neurodivergence. No characters coded as neurodivergent or any related themes.
Revisionist History
Score: 0/100
The film does not engage with historical revisionism. It simply ignores the historical context of the Incan empire entirely.
Lecture Energy
Score: 20/100
While the film contains a clear moral lesson about empathy and humility, it delivers this through narrative and character rather than preachy speeches. The tone remains comedic rather than preachy.
Synopsis
Emperor Kuzco is turned into a llama by his ex-administrator Yzma, and must now regain his throne and his human form with the help of Pacha, a gentle llama herder.
Consciousness Assessment
The Emperor's New Groove presents itself as a comedy of comeuppance, wherein a tyrannical emperor must learn humility through forced proximity to common folk. The film's central moral framework, stripped of its millennial irony, concerns itself with character transformation rather than systemic critique. Kuzco's arc from selfish despot to reformed human being follows a deeply individualistic logic: change your heart, and the world improves. The working-class Pacha exists primarily as a vehicle for this lesson, patient and noble in his poverty, asking little more than to protect his village from imperial destruction. One finds oneself in familiar territory here, the comfortable terrain of pre-woke Disney morality.
What prevents this film from scoring higher is its incuriosity about the structures it depicts. The Incan empire serves as a decorative backdrop rather than a subject worthy of genuine engagement. Yzma, voiced by Eartha Kitt, represents the only female character of consequence, yet her villainy stems from vanity and personal ambition rather than anything ideological. The film's humor operates almost entirely through slapstick and character-based comedy, avoiding any serious interrogation of colonialism, indigenous dispossession, or the mechanisms of imperial power. Its progressive sensibilities, such as they are, amount to teaching a spoiled man to share his wealth and respect his inferiors.
The cast is overwhelmingly white or white-coded in voice performance, with John Goodman anchoring the narrative as the voice of moral wisdom. This is not inherently problematic for a 2000 animated feature, but it reflects the period's casual indifference to questions of representation and cultural specificity. The Emperor's New Groove succeeds as entertainment and contains genuine warmth, but it operates in a pre-consciousness era where the stories we tell about power, hierarchy, and redemption need not examine their own assumptions.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“A spry and appealing film that throws off comic sparks with aplomb.”
“This joyous romp is no mere new groove, it's a live wire -- 110 volts of pure holiday cheer.”
“Suffers from a persistent case of narrative backsliding that only serves to make older members of the audience long for the days of the dwarves, beauties, and poisoned apples of Disney-yore, and younger ones squirm in their seats.”
Consciousness Markers
The voice cast is predominantly white, with minimal representation of actors of color despite the Andean setting. Indigenous characters exist as background elements without meaningful agency.
No LGBTQ+ themes or representation present. The film contains no queer subtext or characters of note.
Yzma is the sole significant female character, defined primarily by vanity and personal villainy rather than ideology. She is not a feminist figure, though her agency as a villain provides some agency.
The film treats Incan culture as decorative rather than subject to serious examination. No meaningful exploration of colonialism, indigenous identity, or racial power dynamics.
No environmental themes or climate consciousness present. The natural world serves purely as setting.
The film critiques individual greed and teaches wealth-sharing, but this operates through personal redemption rather than systemic critique. The solution is individual moral reform, not structural change.
No body positivity messaging present. The transformation into a llama is treated as humiliation and punishment rather than celebration of alternative forms.
No representation of or commentary on neurodivergence. No characters coded as neurodivergent or any related themes.
The film does not engage with historical revisionism. It simply ignores the historical context of the Incan empire entirely.
While the film contains a clear moral lesson about empathy and humility, it delivers this through narrative and character rather than preachy speeches. The tone remains comedic rather than preachy.