Story
Coco celebrates the Mexican tradition of the Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), a festival during which all ancestors are remembered. Miguel (voice of Anthony Gonzalez) is a young Mexican boy who dreams of becoming a musician. His hero is Ernesto De La Cruz (Benjamin Bratt), a musician who died in an accident while on stage. Mama Coco (Ana Ofelia Murguía) is Miguel’s great-grandmother, who lives with him, his parents and his grandmother or Abuelita (Renee Victor). Coco’s father, Hector (Gael García Bernal), was a musician who left Coco and her mother, Imelda (Alanna Ulbech), to pursue his career. Hector never returned, so Imelda started a shoemaking business, which has been in the family ever since. But music has been banned from the household, and Abuelita rigidly enforces this ban.
Abuelita is very angry when she discovers that Miguel has made his own guitar and intends to enter a talent contest. She smashes the guitar, and Miguel runs away to the tomb of De La Cruz. Inside the tomb Miguel somehow passes into the Land of the Dead, where he’s neither quite alive nor quite dead. There he meets his ancestors and learns the true story of what happened to his great-great-grandfather Hector. He discovers that the Land of the Dead isn’t very different from the Land of the Living, with the rich and the famous living (or dead) among the poor and forgotten. Miguel also meets his hero and finds out that not everything is as he thought it was.
Themes
The supernatural; life after death; family relationships
Violence
Coco has some violence. For example:
Sexual references
Nothing of concern
Alcohol, drugs and other substances
Coco shows some use of substances. For example, characters drink on several occasions. In the Land of the Dead, the skeletons all drink at parties and the forgotten skeletons drink out of flasks.
Nudity and sexual activity
Coco shows some mild nudity and sexual activity. For example:
- De La Cruz kisses a woman in a movie scene.
- A husband and wife skeleton kiss.
- A skeleton, who is supposedly nude, poses for an artist.
Product placement
There is no product placement of concern in Coco itself, but associated merchandise is likely to be marketed to children.
Coarse language
None of concern
Ideas to discuss with your children
Coco is acolourful Disney/Pixar animation, which deals with some serious subjects in a funny way. It reinforces the value of family, and its emotional story will pull at the heartstrings. Because of its subject matter and scary scenes, it’s more suited to older children, and children aged 7-10 years are likely to need parental guidance.
The main messages from Coco are about the importance of family, the need for forgiveness, and the need to compromise and make use of your talents. There’s also an important lesson about how things aren’t always as they seem.
Values in this movie that you could reinforce with your children include love and care for your family and gratitude for what you have.
This movie could also give you the chance to talk with your children about what your family believes happens to you when you die.