I'm not the only one who thought this whole movie was wild, right? In some places, it actually provided a pretty poignant comment on the treatment of minorities, but it failed to come through in a big way at the end, and I'm not even sure if that was the intention of the creators. I feel like it would have been better if they punished the police officers instead of inviting them to the big party at the end, especially considering that the police chief actually sentenced a teenaged boy to what appears to be some form of public execution without trial or even any form of evidence other than hearsay for the crime of... graffiting a building? Like, even the other main antagonist got humiliated and forced to help mend her wrongdoings, and she was a teenager. That doesn't excuse her behaviour, but if an actual sixteen-year-old gets punished for trying to pin a crime that she probably assumed would result in, like, a fine or a few nights in jail or something on somebody innocent, then the police chief should be punished for preparing to lynch a child in response to that crime (and for being willing to kill him even if he was innocent??? Like, dude, c'mon.) Also, the character designs for the ghouls look like they were purposefully made to give young children eating disorders, which clashes weirdly with the messages of self-love. To be fair, I am looking at this from the perspective of an older teenager instead of the target audience, which is young children, but I think critically analyzing media that isn't intended for critical analysis is funny.