• Director(s)

    Harry Cripps, Clare Knight

  • Production Year

    2021

  • Genre(s)

    Animation

  • Approx. running minutes

    92m

Film

Back To The Outback

threat, violence, rude humour, language

BACK TO THE OUTBACK is an animated comedy in which a group of small animals escape from a zoo in a bid to return to their natural habitat.

BACK TO THE OUTBACK is an animated comedy in which a group of small animals escape from a zoo in a bid to return to their natural habitat.

violence
Scenes of violence are generally comic and fantastical. Missiles are fired during a car chase, and some animals are hit with tranquiliser darts. There is also a brief scene in which two boxers trade blows and one is knocked to the ground. A boy is seen burning insects with a magnifying glass. A man briefly brandishes a knife at a koala bear, and there are occasional slaps and kicks.
threat and horror
There are a number of scenes in which humans are threatened by animals, who growl and bare teeth. Similarly, animals are frequently threatened by humans trying to capture them. There are a number of chases, and scenes in which characters dangle precariously from heights (and in some instances fall).
language
There is very mild bad language ('damn', 'jerk', 'God').
rude humour
There are several instances of rude humour, such as a koala complaining about having 'a camera up my jacksy'; a man claiming to have captured an animal using 'budgie smugglers'; a creature asking, 'Can I wipe my bottom on your fur?', and an animal being defecated on. In one scene, a boy keen to demonstrate his survival skills gives his father a drink of urine, which he unwittingly sips. In another, a spider vomits into a man's coffee.
There is a running joke about a spider that hopes to find a partner and performs a mating dance.
  • Director(s)

    Harry Cripps, Clare Knight

  • Production Year

    2021

  • Genre(s)

    Animation

  • Approx. running minutes

    92m

very mild threat, violence, rude humour, language
Classified Date:
24/11/2021
Version:
2D
Use:
Cinema
Distributor:
Netflix International B.V.
violence
Scenes of violence are generally comic and fantastical. Missiles are fired during a car chase, and some animals are hit with tranquiliser darts. There is also a brief scene in which two boxers trade blows and one is knocked to the ground. A boy is seen burning insects with a magnifying glass. A man briefly brandishes a knife at a koala bear, and there are occasional slaps and kicks.
threat and horror
There are a number of scenes in which humans are threatened by animals, who growl and bare teeth. Similarly, animals are frequently threatened by humans trying to capture them. There are a number of chases, and scenes in which characters dangle precariously from heights (and in some instances fall).
language
There is very mild bad language ('damn', 'jerk', 'God').
rude humour
There are several instances of rude humour, such as a koala complaining about having 'a camera up my jacksy'; a man claiming to have captured an animal using 'budgie smugglers'; a creature asking, 'Can I wipe my bottom on your fur?', and an animal being defecated on. In one scene, a boy keen to demonstrate his survival skills gives his father a drink of urine, which he unwittingly sips. In another, a spider vomits into a man's coffee.
There is a running joke about a spider that hopes to find a partner and performs a mating dance.
threat, violence, rude humour, language
Classified Date:
10/05/2022
Use:
VOD/Streaming
Distributor:
Netflix International B.V.
violence
Scenes of violence are generally comic and fantastical. Missiles are fired during a car chase, and some animals are hit with tranquiliser darts. There is also a brief scene in which two boxers trade blows and one is knocked to the ground. A boy is seen burning insects with a magnifying glass. A man briefly brandishes a knife at a koala bear, and there are occasional slaps and kicks.
threat and horror
There are a number of scenes in which humans are threatened by animals, who growl and bare teeth. Similarly, animals are frequently threatened by humans trying to capture them. There are a number of chases, and scenes in which characters dangle precariously from heights (and in some instances fall).
language
There is very mild bad language ('damn', 'jerk', 'God').
rude humour
There are several instances of rude humour, such as a koala complaining about having 'a camera up my jacksy'; a man claiming to have captured an animal using 'budgie smugglers'; a creature asking, 'Can I wipe my bottom on your fur?', and an animal being defecated on. In one scene, a boy keen to demonstrate his survival skills gives his father a drink of urine, which he unwittingly sips. In another, a spider vomits into a man's coffee.
There is a running joke about a spider that hopes to find a partner and performs a mating dance.
  • Classified date

    10/05/2022

  • Language

    English