One Battle After Another vs Meet the Spartans: Which Is More Woke?
One Battle After Another appears more woke than Meet the Spartans based on AI analysis, with a difference of about 8 points. Community votes are split or too thin to call a clear winner yet.

Community (votes): ~79/100
See full breakdown for One Battle After Another
Community (votes): not enough data yet
See full breakdown for Meet the SpartansAI vs community
AI verdict
One Battle After Another is more woke than Meet the Spartans (AI).
One Battle After Another leads by 8 points on the AI scale.
Community verdict
Community averages are too close to call (or one side has no votes yet).
Why the scores diverge
- The 8-point gap reflects how much ideology steers each story on our six-dimension pass, not just vibes.
- One Battle After Another highlight: Dialogue feels mostly organic, with occasional moments of messaging.
- Meet the Spartans highlight: The dialogue is primarily comedic and does not serve a political agenda.
- One Battle After Another: Characters have some depth, but Willa's independence is a bit idealized.
- Meet the Spartans: Characters are exaggerated for humor rather than for ideological representation.
One Battle After Another reads higher on message-first dialogue than Meet the Spartans, which nudges the overall profile message-forward. One Battle After Another reads higher on tokenistic characters than Meet the Spartans, which nudges the overall profile message-forward. One Battle After Another reads higher on modern politics injection than Meet the Spartans, which nudges the overall profile message-forward.
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Frequently asked questions
- Which is more woke, One Battle After Another or Meet the Spartans?
- One Battle After Another scores higher on the AI pass (14/100 vs 6/100).
- What do community votes say?
- Community averages are within the tie band or too close to call (79 vs n/a on our vote-weighted scale).
- Why might AI and votes disagree?
- AI scores come from a structured model pass; votes capture how people read the politics or messaging. Trailers, culture-war framing, and release timing can push votes away from the model.