Np - I took my 9 & 11yos and I think the rating is too high given the content. Yes there are some crude references but a lot of things either went over my kids heads or were not as bad as a lot of things they’ve seen. There were much younger kids in the theater, too. I actually felt more like this is a movie for people who don’t like Barbie, hence the higher rather to try to deter people from taking their very young daughters. My kids and I never really played with Barbie but I’ve enjoyed Greta Gerwig’s films and my 11yo wanted to go so we went. It was… fine? Not amazing, definitely not what my husband or i really expected, my kids were bored a bit but liked the visuals and some of the more slapstick moments. We had a good conversation about gender norms and stereotypes and how people are treated differently in society after and my kids “got” it pretty well. |
Yeah I think that's just movies (and television, and life). I'm sorry you and your DD have to navigate such a difficult thing. |
Heh, the irony... |
| I loved the movie! It’s made for women at least 30+, in my opinion. Not inappropriate for kids, but it definitely is not a kids movie. Go see it with your sisters, friends, or by yourself. |
| Saw it with my 14 yo DD and loved it. Quirky, very creative, and fun! |
| I saw it and liked it, I agree it resonates more with mom's then teens - but my two enjoyed it I didn't find it radical at all - but it is unexpected in taking the barbie bubblegum vibe many of us grew up playing with and using it to tell a story of the contradictions of being a woman and a mom. However, i do think the marketing and director were indicators that this wasn't going to me Barbietopia VI. |
| I saw it with my 14-year-old and she loved it. It's a fun movie with a message told via a toy many of us had growing up, for better or worse. If you didn't like it or the message, fine. If you did, fine. It's a movie for crying out loud, not the second coming of christ. |
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It's a movie by a company that makes vapid plastic dolls to bolster it's bottom line under the guise of female empowerment - it's not that serious.
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You clearly didn’t see the movie. |
| I think this is the film that moms need coming out of the pandemic. After three years of trying to hold it all together, this film underscores that the expectations put upon women, and the doll herself, are unattainable. We're expected to chug along as though nothing is wrong, hide in the closet so you never let them see you cry, always say you're doing great when inside you're dying. Barbie gets that--the movie got that. It really resonated with me and I hope all women go to see this film. |
And I never will. I'll stick with Barbie's Dreamhouse Adventures. Nothing can top that. |
Yes - I totally agree with this. There was on the one heavy Barbie and the rest were super-thin. Wish there could have been more of a variety of body types. |
I saw the movie and would agree with that assessment. |
But so what? What movie is not out to bolster the bottom line? That is the point. They aren't public service announcements. |
| Are the references to walking out of the movie in these comments a figure of speech?? Once you are at the movie unless it is really disturbing it seems very dramatic to walk out in the middle. I liked the movie but honestly didn't really see anything that would cause someone to get up and leave mid-movie |