The film explores the damned princess's experience destined to send her entire kingdom to a hundred years slumber. Perhaps there is a different path, as seven dwarves must save the princess by locating the princess's niche so that he can kiss her and save the kingdom completely.
The Seventh Dwarf's female characters are deplorably retrograde on both the script and design levels; they have little to do except be rescued, and Snow White is a vain, buxom sexpot whom the dwarfs leer at.
Elements from "Snow White," "Sleeping Beauty," "Tangled," "Frozen," "Happy Feet" and "Shrek" have been ineptly stitched together into a leaden film that children will enjoy about as much as lumps in their oatmeal.
The script balances kiddie-friendly winsomeness and knowing winks for grownups, and is more tightly constructed than you'd expect, with even fleeting throwaway gags delivering plot payoffs later on.
There are innumerable preferable ways to kill some time without having to endure some of the most determinedly ugly computer animation I have seen in years.