
The same shading goes for language - from "suck" to its rhyming cousin - and drug use, ranging from cigarettes to stoner pics to heavy cocaine use. Coyote), the fantasy of "The Golden Compass" or the real-person violence of "No Country for Old Men." Amy Paice says she can't stand horror movies, but daughter Dana, who just graduated from Sandwich High School, has watched them ever since she figured out how the special effects are done, which took out the scare factor. Violence, for example, can be cartoonish (a la Wile E. How else do parents judge what's OK for their children to see? While nudity and obvious sex are deal-breakers for most parents of teens, other factors aren't as clear-cut. With Pixar, I'm confident about their product." Sue Derosier of West Barnstable, mother of 9- and 11-year-old daughters, for example, says, "If it's Disney or Pixar, I'm good. The studio matters, according to many parents.
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The first in the series in 2003 was, in fact, the first Disney movie that got that rating, for "intense sequences of action-adventure violence" (remember those battling skeletons?). The "Pirates of the Caribbean," movies are rated PG-13, but ask nearly any preteen - certainly the 11-year-olds - and they've seen it. Oh, that Johnny Depp has provided a quandary in recent years. I let my 15-year-old go to see it, after I did.) The combination of it being a musical, the tragic love story, and the lure of star Johnny Depp, phenomenally popular with teens after the "Pirates of the Caribbean" movies, won out for many parents over the movie's buckets of blood and the themes of revenge, lust and, let's face it, cannibalism. Some of the preteens had seen it for several teens interviewed, that was one of their first R-rated movies, and they didn't think the "graphic bloody violence" was so bad. Interestingly, "Sweeney Todd" kept coming up during interviews with local kids about movies they're allowed to watch.

They don't need to be exposed to stuff in the movies." I think they get so exposed to stuff so young. "I don't mind him watching more advanced movies, but it was going to scare the pants off him. "It's R! He's 11!" she says, as if that's all anyone needed to know. Nicola Stacy of West Barnstable had those thoughts when her son Jacob, 11, asked to see "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street." It's rated R because the Stephen Sondheim musical it's based on is about an insane barber who slits enemies' throats and whose landlady bakes their flesh into meat pies. You're putting stuff into your child's head, but do you want it there?" "But what they see really does affect how they grow. "No one dies from seeing an inappropriate movie," Perle concedes. But even if the main point of the media is to entertain, they're teaching (kids) something."Įxperts say a lot of parents think, "Well, my kid can handle this." Or that the content is going right over their heads. "It doesn't come in the front door and say, 'Can I teach your kids about this?'.


Many parents don't realize that media, coming into their homes "under the radar screen," can be "a powerful educational tool," says Kimberly Thompson, a Harvard professor and director of the university's KidsRisk project.
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So you don't throw them the mental keys without teaching them how to negotiate the messages along the way." "You wouldn't throw them the car keys without getting out there and teaching them how to drive. "Just because it's a movie, you don't stop being a parent," Perle says.
