This is not a nostalgia cash grab. Well — maybe a little. But there's a version of the Care Bears revival happening in 2026 that actually has something behind it, and it's worth paying attention to.
Start with the movie. Warner Bros. has hired Amos Vernon and Nunzio Randazzo — the writers behind the People We Meet on Vacation adaptation — to write a Care Bears feature film, with director Josh Greenbaum attached. Greenbaum directed Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar and Strays, and he has a real sensibility for the kind of warm, slightly absurdist comedy that a Care Bears film would need to work. That is not a random combination of names thrown together to move stuffed animals at retail. Someone at the studio thought about it.
The film doesn't have a release date yet. But the creative team is credible enough that dismissing it outright would be premature.
“But the creative team is credible enough that dismissing it outright would be premature.”
Then there's the product side, which is genuinely sprawling. Cloudco Entertainment, the company that owns the Care Bears brand, has been building out its partner network aggressively. An adidas collaboration is coming — footwear and apparel, the kind of drop that will sell out before most people know it exists. Basic Fun!, the primary toy partner for the US, Canada, and the UK, has dropped a Harry Potter x Care Bears crossover collection timed to Harry Potter's 25th anniversary, which combines two of the most licensing-friendly IPs in existence into something that feels, somehow, inevitable.
Key Takeaways
- →Care Bears: Yes, Warner Bros.
- →Movies: Yes, Warner Bros.
- →Pop Culture: Yes, Warner Bros.
- →Warner Bros: Yes, Warner Bros.
Scentsy has a limited-edition Care Bears collection with warmers and plush buddies. Kung Fu Tea is running a Care Bears collaboration through late April with four themed drinks and matching packaging. HarperPop is releasing a run of books starting this summer — a coloring book first, then a search-and-find in September, then a board book in December.
And then, earlier this month, the Care Bears appeared on The Masked Singer for a dedicated "Care Bears Night," which generated the kind of bewildered-but-engaged social media chatter that is, in 2026, about as good a marketing outcome as a brand can hope for.
Whether this all adds up to a genuine cultural moment or just a very active licensing year is something only time will answer. But a film with a real director, a credible writing team, and this much retail momentum is more than most of these revivals ever get.