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Super Charlie
Overlook Pick

Super Charlie

Some superheroes wear capes. Others wear diapers.
64
User Score19 ratings
TMDB 6.416+20241h 18mSV
AnimationFamilyActionComedy

Synopsis

Wille has always dreamed of becoming a superhero and fight crime alongside his father. This dream is shattered when Wille's brother, Charlie, is born. Charlie gets all the attention, and on top of that – he has superpowers. When a supervillain and an evil scientist enact a plan to overthrow the city, Wille and Charlie must put their differences aside and work together as a team. Can an infant and his envious brother save the city?

Director
Jon HolmbergFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Nordisk Film Sweden6 production companies
Release
December 25, 2024Released
Box Office
$419,252Budget $4M

Top Cast

8 of 10
Orlando Wahlsteen
Orlando Wahlsteen
Wille (voice)
Silas Strand
Silas Strand
Charlie (voice)
Tuva Novotny
Tuva Novotny
Mom (voice)
Sven Björklund
Sven Björklund
Anton (voice)
Joakim Jennefors
Inferio (voice)
Ulla Skoog
Ulla Skoog
Kerstin (voice)
Johan Rödin
Dad (voice)
Lily Wahlsteen
Lily Wahlsteen
Sister (voice)

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Aug 20, 2025

Despite being about fifty years older than it’s demographic, I actually quite enjoyed this. Every century, a meteorite endowed with super-powers flies path the earth, and the only very recently born “Charlie” somehow manages to absorb it’s green dust. Nothing is too obvious when he goes home with his writer mother, who is constantly glued to her laptop; his policeman father and his elder brother “Wille”. Of course, there is soon a degree of little brother envy as these parents dote on their new arrival, but it is his sibling who discovers that at barely a week old, “Charlie” can talk! That’s just the beginning of his quirks, and so soon the pair are on the trail of a gang who have caused their father considerable trouble over the years. All the while, the police are under pressure to buy some specially adapted uniforms that could make them into “Robocop” types, but fairly quickly we learn that the evil “Imperio” is up to a bit of sophisticated manipulation whilst it’s moustachioed sidekick cunningly devises a pint-sized chair to essentially percolate the formidable powers of the young babe, so he can make himself an ultra-potent espresso. The story follows a predictable path, but along the way it does make a few salient points about obsessed parents, brotherly rivalry and mistrust whilst also proving that, in the end, family ought to come first. It’s not really a film for young kids as some of the dialogue is a bit tongue-in-cheek, but the visual effects are quite good fun and the message it wishes to convey to children and parents alike are adequately wrapped up in a light-hearted, sci-fi, amiability that sees the two lads learn to communicate with each other without the need for a phone, or a tablet, or any form of social media at all. That’s got to be a good thing.

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