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What do you all think: Are PG-13 movies appropriate for young children? Why or why not?
How do you feel when you're attending an adult-themed movie in the evening and someone brings a child into the theatre?
Olivia
Everyone has different ideas in parenting. Now when my son was a little older say around 10 or 11 my husband would take him to watch action pack movies during the summer. I call them guy movies.
I am sure when I would drop him & his friends off for an evening movie (PG13) they tried to get into different rated R movie. Trust me now that he is 18 he tells me all the things kids do & what he & his friends did, they just never got caught.
But at the age of 6 NO at midnight he was home in bed....summer or not.
It REALLY bothers me when I go to a move that is PG-13 and I see little children in the theater. My first thought is that parents are really bad at discriminating what is appropriate viewing for a child of that age. I think most parents take their children to Non-age appropriate movies because THEY want to see the movie and can not afford a babysitter so they make their toddlers & small children view very inappropriate material.
If they want to be good parents they should get a baby sitter or wait for it to go on DVD and watch it when the kids are in bed. It's rated PG-13 for a reason. I think some parents are just very selfish and don't care what they are exposing their children to.
2. Surely there was a way to run this piece without bringing in the Aurora shooting.
Jeune has a point that not all movies seem to fit their rating, but why take the chance? We've put on DVDs of PG movies for our kids when they were younger and been a little uncomfortable with the themes. Of course, PG does mean "parental guidance."
But, to be quite frank...movies are expensive these days and it is a special event for my husband and I to go spend the money. We want to enjoy it. And, it is hard to enjoy a movie when someone's child is screaming through the whole thing.
Go see the movie, determine if it is appropriate for your kids and then rent it for them on DVD later if you feel they can handle it. That way, they can see the movie, wiggle around, make noise, AND tell you if it makes them feel scared or uncomfortable and you can turn it OFF at your leisure.
Just my two cents.
Butterfly
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