
Experiment 626 was designed to be a weapon. Nobody told him about ohana. That information, once received, changed everything.
Disney's Lilo & Stitch arrived in 2002 and did something the studio had not quite done before: it set a Disney film in Hawaii, with a Hawaiian family at its centre, and it took that family's grief seriously. Lilo Pelekai is not a princess. She is a strange, fiercely imaginative, occasionally biting seven-year-old girl who is still learning how to be in the world after the death of her parents, looked after by an older sister who is twenty-two and doing her absolute best under conditions that are genuinely difficult. Into this arrives Stitch — a small blue alien genetic experiment with six limbs, enhanced strength, near-indestructibility and the social skills of something designed exclusively for destruction — and what unfolds is one of Disney's most unexpectedly moving stories about what family actually means when you have to build it from what you have.
Ohana means family. Family means nobody gets left behind or forgotten. It is a simple rule. The film earns it across seventy-five minutes of comedy, chaos and an amount of genuine emotional weight that catches you off guard every time, regardless of how many times you have seen it. The 2025 live-action adaptation introduced Lilo and Stitch to a new generation of ohana. The blue alien remained irresistible. He always will be.
Our Lilo & Stitch collection brings together officially licensed figures, plush toys, apparel, accessories, homeware and gifts — from Stitch and Lilo Funko Pops and collector's pieces to mugs, prints and keepsakes for fans of Disney's most loveable chaos agent and the family that claimed him. For the Stitch devotee who has owned every iteration of this particular blue alien and will own the next one too.
Ohana. It means everyone. Including you.







































