There was absolutely nothing in the film about money. That's something Fox Business (the greater of two evils) would make up to perpetuate the imaginary conspiracy theory about the poor trying to get the rich's hard earned money and fears of communism that would never happen in this country in a million years. As in the same crap they said about "The Muppets" (to be fair, the Tex Richman backstory being cut out, all a half a minute of it, robs the nuance and makes Tex one dimensional) and Arrietty (which, as I said a hundred times before, is about a group of people that refuse handouts because it leads to trouble, in other words a perfect film to bend to a Libertarian standpoint). They even went after The Lego Movie because Lord Business looked like Mitt Romney somehow. Know who else he looked like? Basically anyone because that's how Lego minifigures all look. They used the same hair piece for a Spider-Man J. Jonah Jameson minifig. I mean, I showed someone a Brown Ninja from Ninjago minifig, and they thought it was the "Where are my Paaaaaants?" guy. And I have them both standing next to each other and can barely tell the difference. And again, The Lego Movie was all about how the government was bad and trying to control everyone, stopping them from being individuals. Isn't...isn't that the kind of moral of most Ayn Rand books?
If "left wing underlying concepts" means the movie's underlying concept about racism (evenly handed and perfectly executed to the point they're not afraid to say that everyone's a little bit racist), then you lost me. The underlying concept of the film is to see individuals against their stereotype and how lumping together groups of people in light of the actions of a few can throw society into chaos. Isn't...isn't that the lesson we want kids to learn? Racism shouldn't be a righty lefty issue, and those on either side of the spectrum can be racist, but they make up a tiny minority of each. Getting along is straight up stuff we teach kids when they first can absorb knowledge. Isn't the point of teaching kids tolerance so they can make as many friends and indeed business connections when they're older as possible? Refusing service means refusing money (a scene in an Elephant run ice cream store pretty much points that out), and fear makes society crumble and punish the innocent while the guilty don't care what happens because the guilty are usually sociopaths. I see nothing in this movie converting kids to vote for the Green Rainbow party.