Anonymous wrote:I let me 7 year old watch is, but only when he's home by himself while I run a few errands.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, we tried and she did not make it through the movie - she was tired and it was "too scary". We'll try again next year.![]()
DH and I watched the rest after the kids went to sleep and man, there's some rough language and people are really mean. The story line with the old man neighbor is really sweet though.
Anonymous wrote:DCUM, never change. Uptight parents are the norm. Avoid Rudolph as well, it has discrimination against a reindeer with an obvious disability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe how much “talking through it” Home Alone “requires.” What’s going to happen when you finally let them see the greatest Christmas movie of all time… Die Hard?
We just watched die hard! Kids are 12 and 15. Yippee ki yay. They were sort of expecting that the bad guy would turn out to be not so bad (snape influence). Loved it. And I agree - best Christmas movie ever!!
Anonymous wrote:Yes. I was also concerned about the violence but they hit the tone just right and none of it is gratuitous -- the burglars are punished for their own greed and stupidity.
Actually the worst part of the movie is how mean the family is to Kevin in the opening scenes-- you'd never see family members talking that way to one another, but especially not a little kid, in a comedy today. In a drama about an abusive family, yes, but it wouldn't be played for laughs like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, because what all of you are not understanding is that the core of the message to a 7 year old is abandonment. The child in that movie is abandoned by his parents. Your child will think "Oh, wow, will my parents do that to me? Hollywood says so" and now you have a kid with an anxiety disorder
I literally can't tell if you're trolling but I'm a child therapist and Home Alone is not how anxiety disorders are created.