Parents' Guide to

The Willoughbys

Movie PG 2020 92 minutes
The Willoughbys Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Renee Schonfeld By Renee Schonfeld , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 8+

Irresistible kids banish dreadful parents in fanciful tale.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 8+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 10+

Based on 66 parent reviews

age 10+

Anti-Family Horror Show

Plot Summary: The Willoughby children attempts to kill their abusive parents with the help of loving strangers. This is possibly the worst "family movie" I've ever seen. The Willoughby children are abused by their self-obsessed parents, so the kids concoct a plan to end their parents lives prematurely. The children send their parents on a dangerous trip around the world so they may be killed in an accident. This movie sends a horrible message to children. It tells kids that parents are mostly selfish and abusive, and it's okay to try to off your parents, and that you can entrust total strangers to help you because they care more about your welfare than your parents. This is easily the worst movie I've ever seen with my children.
age 16+

Disturbing

This is the darkest most disturbing children's movie I've ever seen. As a Teacher and a parent, please do Not let your young children watch this. It grossly dismisses deeply abusive, traumatic behavior and issues.

What's the Story?

In THE WILLOUGHBYS, the four Willoughby kids -- Tim (voiced by Will Forte), Jane (Alessia Cara), and twins Barnaby and Barnaby (Sean Cullen) -- come from a long line of successful, respected, and mustache-wearing ancestors. Unfortunately, however, the present-day adult Willoughbys (Martin Short and Jane Krakowski) don't live up to the family name. Not only are they neither successful nor respected, but they're also atrocious parents. Spending all of their days smooching, knitting, and wrapped in each other's arms, they treat their kids as afterthoughts -- ignored, unfed, and unloved. When the kids find an abandoned baby girl -- an Orphan with a capital "O" -- on their doorstep, their efforts to find a home for little "Ruth" spark a terrific idea. What if they can become orphans themselves? And so, after the kids make a quick trip to a travel store and revise an enticing brochure, Father and Mother are off on an extended world tour, with some comic peril. The kids joyously celebrate their freedom until the cheapest nanny their parents could find shows up. Nanny Linda (Maya Rudolph) is as unexpected as her arrival. Horrified at first, the Willoughby kids soon learn that this nanny makes a very creative ally. Teaming up with Linda, that pesky little orphan baby, and a very quirky candy maker (Terry Crews), Tim, Jane, and Barnabys A and B fend off the return of Father and Mother Willoughby and find out what "family" really means.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (66 ):
Kids say (83 ):

A wonderfully whimsical tale with dark themes is softened by warmth, humor, and stellar performances by talented comic actors who brighten the already inventive and luminous animation. Ricky Gervais's "Cat" narration sets the tone from the opening moments. His comic snark tells us exactly where the film is going and he never lets the audience down. With The Willoughbys, Netflix has stepped up its Original animated feature game (from Bron Studios). Highly recommended for families who love to laugh together.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the slapstick violence in The Willoughbys. How do filmmakers let their audiences know that the action scenes aren't to be taken seriously? How does your family decide which movies are right for the kids in your house?

  • How do the bright colors, spirited music, and comedy (both slapstick and witty) balance the darkness of the movie's plot elements (abandoned children, isolation, uncaring social services)?

  • Why is it important for kids to be old enough to understand the humor in this film? How might someone too young or too sensitive be upset by the story?

Movie Details

Did we miss something on diversity?

Research shows a connection between kids' healthy self-esteem and positive portrayals in media. That's why we've added a new "Diverse Representations" section to our reviews that will be rolling out on an ongoing basis. You can help us help kids by

Common Sense Media's unbiased ratings are created by expert reviewers and aren't influenced by the product's creators or by any of our funders, affiliates, or partners.

See how we rate