Anonymous wrote: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
So for the last 20 years our society is full of kids with anxiety disorders from watching this movie? Really ?? I grew up watching Hansel and Gretel being baked in an oven by the stepmother/witch and I’m a perfectly normal functioning adult !!
+1 we talked about it with our kids… how Kevin being left like that and someone not helping him would not really happen. The rude way the whole family talks to one another.My kids love it (6 and 8, watched it last year, too), but understand it does not represent reality.How the bad guys getting hurt is funny in the movie, but would really hurt them in real life.
Anonymous wrote:Every single violent thing Kevin does to the burglars could have been prevented by them just NOT trying to rob his house. He booby traps the house and doesn't back down when they try to break in anyway. He also I dependently discovers the benefits of cleaning up after himself and having good hygiene. His mom realizes she has been placing value on the wrong things and holds herself accountable for her mistakes (the dad doesn't, which sucks, but is also realistic so a lot of kids will sadly relate).
Also, Kevin discovers his fear of his elderly neighbor is irrational and limiting, and he overcomes this fear to forge a friendship that leads to the man reuniting with his own family.
It's a Christmas movie about family, connection, the importance of home, and how ingenuity and determination trumps greed and avarice. Also at one point a bad guy gets hit in the head with a paint can and the camera work in that scene is terrific.
I wish someone would make a contemporary Christmas movie as perfect and tightly written as Home Alone. I agree it's a very white movie and if it were made to say, Kevin's family would be multi-racial and then at least one of the burglars would be a POC, and there would be minimum of two conversations about privilege, and I truly do not think that would be an improvement. And if your going to have an all white cast, putting Catherine O'Hara in there makes it feel less egregious to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably. But, then I would probably do what I did with all the Disney films I thought would be great but turned out to be totally dated and sexist and other stuff - think what was I thinking. (Original Freaky Friday anyone?)
Virtually zero representation by BIPOC characters or actors in that abhorrent film.

Anonymous wrote:Probably. But, then I would probably do what I did with all the Disney films I thought would be great but turned out to be totally dated and sexist and other stuff - think what was I thinking. (Original Freaky Friday anyone?)
Or profanity for a 7 year old!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM, never change. Uptight parents are the norm. Avoid Rudolph as well, it has discrimination against a reindeer with an obvious disability.
np you know there is a difference, right? Not everyone likes violence.
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.