10 Movies Like ‘Sketch’

Sketch (2025)
Sketch (2025)

Here are Cinephile Corner’s 10 recommendations for movies like Sketch:

Inside Out 2

Inside Out 2 (2024)

I found the overall package of Inside Out 2 enjoyable, with Sadness (Phyllis Smith) and Joy (Amy Poehler) as captivating and cartoonishly real in the sequel as they were in the original. It’s a new entry worthy of the title, despite enough material here to expand on over the course of multiple movies.

Read our full review of Inside Out 2

A Minecraft Movie

A Minecraft Movie (2025)

A Minecraft Movie is a complete misfire—an example of what happens when a studio sees a brand, not a story. It fails both as an adaptation and as entertainment. It’s not funny, not charming, and not visually interesting. It’s just loud, dumb, and disposable. For a game that has inspired millions through endless creativity and player agency, this movie feels like the exact opposite: rigid, forced, and fundamentally joyless.

Read our full review of A Minecraft Movie

Wonka

Wonka (2023)

In a surprising turn of events, Wonka emerges as one of the standout success stories of 2023, defying initial skepticism surrounding its release. Helmed by director Paul King and starring Timothée Chalamet, this imaginative take on the world of Willy Wonka offers a refreshing and delightful experience that captivates audiences from the opening title sequence to the end.

Read our full review of Wonka

Dog Man

Dog Man (2025)

Dog Man is quick, goofy, and genuinely entertaining—a rare kids movie that doesn’t insult its audience’s intelligence. For viewers expecting a hollow, IP-driven cash grab, this ends up being a pleasant surprise. It’s a mid-tier animated film that punches a little above its weight, and for families looking for something fast, funny, and a little off-kilter, it more than delivers.

Read our full review of Dog Man

Paddington in Peru

Paddington in Peru (2025)

Paddington in Peru had an uphill climb from the start. Making a third Paddington movie without director Paul King—who turned the first two into modern family classics—already felt risky, and replacing Sally Hawkins with Emily Mortimer as Mary Brown only heightened that sense of change. King’s films struck a rare balance: sharp British wit, slapstick CGI bear hijinks, and an almost radical kindness that landed at a moment when audiences were desperate for warmth. Without him, it’s no surprise this third outing feels different.

Read our full review of Paddington in Peru

How to Train Your Dragon

How to Train Your Dragon (2025)

How to Train Your Dragon is the latest in a long line of live-action remakes that feel more like box office insurance policies than artistic endeavors. Directed by Dean DeBlois, who also helmed the original animated trilogy, this version revisits the well-loved 2010 DreamWorks film, but with real actors, heavier visual effects, and—unfortunately—the same core issue plaguing nearly all these remakes: a lack of purpose beyond profit.

Read our full review of How to Train Your Dragon

The Little Mermaid

The Little Mermaid (2023)

As far as the collection of Disney live action remakes goes, The Little Mermaid is better than The Lion KingAladdinMulan, and others. But it still has the same problems entrenched in it as the latter movies. There is still little reason for its existence beyond making a few dollars.

Read our full review of The Little Mermaid

The Wild Robot

The Wild Robot (2024)

The overall package of The Wild Robot is ultimately quite honorable and noteworthy. The animated genre offers just a few great movies a year, and The Wild Robot falls into that category. It’s probably the frontrunner for Best Animated Picture at the Academy Awards, and I’d add that we’ve had much worse winners should this take home the prize. It’s sweet and effortlessly likeable, even if you can see the mechanisms of it working behind the scenes.

Read our full review of The Wild Robot

Elemental

Elemental (2023)

Elemental acts as a surprising return to the roots of Pixar. It’s a movie with a host of relevant themes and messages rolled into a sincere and effective love story. It’s been a a minute since Pixar landed an original story with such a clear balance of narrative and comedy.

Read our full review of Elemental

Lilo & Stitch

Lilo & Stitch (2025)

Disney’s live-action Lilo & Stitch lands a hair above the studio’s recent remake baseline, but that’s faint praise. Dean Fleischer Camp preserves some of the original’s charm—chiefly the inherent cuteness and chaos of Stitch and a relative lack of rubbery, wall-to-wall CG—while stretching the story to a heavier, slower, and less colorful feature that rarely justifies revisiting it over the 2002 animated Lilo & Stitch. Compared with glossy retreads like The Lion KingMufasaDumbo, or The Little Mermaid, this is more tolerable; compared with the animated classic, it feels muted.

Read our full review of Lilo & Stitch

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