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What You Need To Know:
The first six episodes of THE WONDERFULLY WEIRD WORLD OF GUMBALL feature colorful animation, fast pacing and quirky characters. The voice actors are good, and the humor often lands. The episodes have a light moral worldview. Characters make wrong decisions but often learn their lesson. One episode portrays the importance of family despite the mother’s annoyance with her family members. However, THE WONDERFULLY WEIRD WORLD OF GUMBALL sometimes gets bogged down in some inappropriate scatological humor, adult hypocrisy and occasional political correctness.
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THE WONDERFULLY WEIRD WORLD OF GUMBALL is an animated series on Hulu about an anthropomorphic cat named Gumball and his adopted brother Darwin, who get into mischief at home and school, much to their mother’s chagrin. They live with her, their father, and their sister, Anais, and get into shenanigans together or with the whole family. Each episode has a self-contained storyline with a problem to solve, and episodes feature recurring characters from previous episodes. The series continues the story of the cult classic series, THE AMAZING WORLD OF GUMBALL, which aired on Cartoon Network from 2011 to 2019.
MOVIEGUIDE® watched the first six episodes of THE WONDERFULLY WEIRD WORLD OF GUMBALL.
The first episode, “The Burger,” acknowledges the passage of time between the two series. Gumball and Darwin scramble to find a healthier alternative to eat than fast food hamburgers. Their search leads to a struggle against the corruption of a rich owner of a fast food chain who seems to have totally manipulated the food industry.
In the second episode, “The Assistant,” Gumball and Darwin’s mother must deal with her family’s lack of help around the house and the existence of an artificial intelligence in her life.
In the third episode, “The Distance,” Gumball and Darwin’s constant togetherness drives their mom to separate them in different rooms, aiming to teach them independence. However, Gumball strongly opposes this idea.
In the fourth episode, “The Thing,” before their paternal grandmother visits them, their father must figure out something their mother mentioned recently or risk losing his marriage.
In the fifth episode, “The Butts,” Gumball wants to read his poem about butts in school, but his principal forbids him to do so because of his insecurity about his butt.
In the sixth episode, “The Traffic,” their mother wants to take the family to an amusement park before it closes forever, as a gift for their sister, Anais.
The first six episodes of THE WONDERFULLY WEIRD WORLD OF GUMBALL are like an animated fever dream. They feature colorful, simple animation with fast pacing and quirky characters who are aware of their existence within the show and in the real world. The voice actors give great performances, and the humor sometimes lands. As the title suggests, weirdness ensues in every episode as if someone walked into a fever dream and has a hard time getting out. The episodes blend of 2-D and 3-D characters works because of the strangeness of the whole endeavor.
However, the filmmakers overdo Gumball and Darwin’s shenanigans, as they did in the original cartoons. Also, the parents demonstrate hypocrisy when teaching the children to behave, because they also do things they shouldn’t. The series goes to inappropriate and bizarre places with “The Butts” episode in particular. The episode presents the principal’s insecurity with how his tiny rear end looks, but it has too many rear end shots which distract from the message. The series should have toned down that episode’s immaturity.
In most of the first six episodes, though, the series presents a light moral worldview. For example, characters make the wrong decisions but learn their lesson at the end of the episode. One episode portrays the importance of family despite the mother’s annoyance with her family members. Ultimately, the showrunners tackle complicated topics with humor. The first six episodes also have some light Romantic elements where Gumball, the title character, advises another character to be true to himself and have self-esteem.
MOVIEGUIDE® advises caution for older children because of the scatological humor, adult hypocrisy and occasional political correctness in the first six episodes. The negative content dilutes the program’s positive moral and child friendly elements.




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