
Mickey 17 earns a moderate 5/10 for its class-exploitation satire and diverse casting, which echo anti-authoritarian themes without centering identity politics or overshadowing the core cloning story.
Mickey 17 centers on class exploitation through the 'expendable' cloning system on a colony planet, with Mickey (Robert Pattinson) repeatedly dying for corporate and colonial gain, directly echoing Bong Joon-ho's prior works like Snowpiercer and Parasite.
The narrative amplifies this via the villain Kenneth Marshall (Mark Ruffalo), a hypocritical authoritarian leader blending political power, corporate control, and religious cult following with red-hat supporters and breeding policies, alongside his wife Ylfa (Toni Collette). Diverse casting includes Naomi Ackie as security agent and love interest Nasha (a Black actress in a prominent role who assumes leadership) and Steven Yeun as grifter friend Timo, though these are original adaptations rather than source swaps.
Bong stated in interviews the film explores human dignity, repeating societal mistakes, and class consciousness, with added political satire beyond the novel's focus on the human condition. Reception shows polarization, with audience critiques labeling it heavy-handed anti-authoritarian messaging and underperformance tied to perceived preachiness, while critics noted the satire's focus on economic disparity and colonization. These elements influence themes and character arcs noticeably but remain secondary to the core cloning premise and sci-fi comedy, without identity-politics centrality or source-material alterations for diversity.
We've run a full content analysis on Mickey 17 and scored it 5/10 on the woke scale. Read our detailed breakdown above to see exactly what we found.
Our analysis checks for themes like identity politics, race-swapping, gender ideology, environmental activism, anti-religious messaging, and other progressive agenda elements. The score breakdown above shows which specific categories were flagged and how heavily they factor into Mickey 17's overall score.
Wokeometer focuses on ideological content rather than traditional ratings (violence, language, etc.). Mickey 17 is rated R. For a full picture, combine our woke analysis with the age ratingto decide if it's right for your family.
We evaluate media across multiple ideological categories on a 0–10 scale. Scores of 0–3 mean story-first, 4–6 have moderate elements, and 7–10 flag heavily agenda-driven content. Learn more about our methodology →
Methodology: Each score synthesizes audience discourse, critic and aggregator reception, and press coverage — weighed against the work itself, not any single source.
See how this title scores across all 5 woke subcategories with detailed explanations.
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