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The NYT is all up about what makes a scary kid's movie. They're talking about Where the Wild Things Are, a film my cousin Heather has repeatedly reminded me that I'm going to see with her (but probably without her three-year-old). And the folks at the NYT are all on about what makes a kid's movie scary like they even know.

Kids find things scary that adults do not, and the other way 'round, too. I was watching Finding Nemo (for the first time) with my brother's kids and was bloody well horrified that Nemo's mom and his siblings were basically decimated in the first couple of minutes of the film. My brother's son was pretty unfazed by all that-- he'd seen the movie before but apparently never got hung up on the clownfish massacre at the beginning of the movie. He was going on with the adventure of Nemo and his dad while I was still stuck at "They're all dead." "It'll be OK, Aunt Jessica." "No, you don't seem to get it. THEY'RE ALL DEAD!!!." "It's OK, Aunt Jessica." No. Not okay. NOT OK. Horrific. How the hell can they show Finding Nemo to kids? Because what kids find scary and what adults find scary are not the same. (I get that the "they're all dead" thing is important to frame the story. It explains why Nemo's dad is so overprotective and why he worries so much. I understand why it's in the movie. But still. It's horrific. I was not prepared for that in Finding Nemo and it really knocked me for a loop.)

Date: 2009-10-20 06:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] houseboatonstyx.livejournal.com
I've read the SWALLOWS AND AMAZONS series every couple of years since about 5th grade, and parts of it get scarier the older I get. As a child I knew perfectly well that these were children's books so nothing really bad was going to happen. As an adult, I forget that and get caught up in some really very dangerous action (which the children in the book aren't scared of, which of course makes the situation more dangerous....).

Date: 2009-10-23 10:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alycewilson.livejournal.com
I had a similar reaction when I saw "Finding Nemo," so I know what you're talking about.

When I saw "Ghostbusters" in the movie theater, someone had a small child. When the Stay-Puf Marshmallow Mann arrived, he began to scream and cry and had to be taken out of the theatre. So yes, you never know.

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