Why is hansel and gretel rated pg 13




















A teen girl touches a tree trunk and when she walks away; its heavy limbs creak and lean toward her. A teen girl and a younger boy approach a house with fires burning outside on the grounds; they knock on the door and look in a window, the boy climbs through a window and inside, takes food from the table and puts some in his pocket and the girl panics when she sees someone inside wrap him with a cape; a woman comes out of the house with the boy unharmed.

A young boy helps a woman sharpen an axe blade on a sharpening wheel. A teen girl asks herself what would have happened if she had slapped a man asking her uncomfortable questions. A teen girl and her young brother argue and he accuses her of making trouble. A man tells a teen girl and her young brother that they must follow the path he has laid out for them or they will meet wolves.

A teen girl talks about souls being trapped in a place. A woman talks about being young again. A teen girl vomits into a chamber pot we hear her retch but do not see goo. A teen girl and her young brother talk about being hungry and they find mushrooms that they taste please see the Substance Use category for more details ; the boy holds his stomach and runs to the side of a tree at one point we do not see him vomit, but it is implied that he might have.

A teen girl is shown with scabs on her knees. Please Note: We have not viewed this movie. The information below is a summary based on data gathered from government and industry sponsored film classification agencies in various global regions. I check in every week to take advantage of their amazing services. I've referred dozens of friends to this service because my 1 resource for deciding whether or not to show a movie to my kids, or to see one myself, is ScreenIt.

I signed up to get Screen It weekly reviews a long time ago, when my kids were young and I wanted to know more about movies before we went to a theater or rented.

Now one child is in law school, other in undergraduate, and I still read the weekly Screen Its! It helps me know what my husband and I want to see or rent, and what to have waiting at home that we all will enjoy when my "kids" come home. I depend on Screen It reviews. They usually just present the facts and let me decide if the movie is appropriate or of interest for my family and me.

Thank you for providing that service, Screen It! I have 4 children who are now in college. Kristy M. Wright is a NYC-based writer and cinephile. She treats blockbuster movies and high-brow arthouse films with equal respect, and loves visiting tiny, independent movie theaters to see them.

Her media career spans everywhere on the spectrum between journalism and PR. In the past decade she has written, interviewed, or edited for media outlets on five different continents. Before settling into her writing career, Kristy was a professional figure skater in traveling ice shows.

Nowadays, she keeps active by watching actors train for superhero roles on their social media feeds. By Kristy M.



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