deaddmwalking wrote:So with Halloween approaching my kids wanted to watch some scary movies (ages 12, 8, 4). I don't want to traumatize them so we've watched several movies that are supposed to be scary but not TOO scary.
Hocus Pocus?
Also, Tremors was great for a comedy/horror movie series.
Good Halloween shows for the very young are tricky, since Halloween is kind of inherently an 8-18 year old kind of holiday, so I'm scraping the barrel a little bit. That said, I liked the first Halloween Town even when I was very little, and it's one of the better Disney Channel originals.
I would also recommend the Tremors TV series. And maybe Beetlejuice, but that movie does have one bit of profanity in it.
Koumei wrote:I'm just glad that Jill Stein stayed true to her homeopathic principles by trying to win with .2% of the vote. She just hasn't diluted it enough!
Koumei wrote:I am disappointed in Santorum: he should carry his dead election campaign to term!
Just a heads up... Your post is pregnant... When you miss that many periods it's just a given.
I want him to tongue-punch my box.
]
The divine in me says the divine in you should go fuck itself.
Chamomile wrote:Good Halloween shows for the very young are tricky, since Halloween is kind of inherently an 8-18 year old kind of holiday, so I'm scraping the barrel a little bit. That said, I liked the first Halloween Town even when I was very little, and it's one of the better Disney Channel originals.
It doesn't help that there are people who think "Kids need to know about the real world. Let's make Watership Down, and advertise it with rabbits so they want to watch it."
I've found Ernest Scared Stupid fares well with 8 year olds but can be a bit intense for weenier 4 year olds. Compared to Tremors though I'd think it would be fine.
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When my sister was 4, the two movies she insisted on watching over and over and over again were The Wizard of Oz and Aliens. She would grab my arm and say "I wanna watch the skin coming out of the lady movie!" until I put it on. Again.
She had very good taste. Those two movies hold up after you've seen them upwards of thirty times. My parents were kind of pissed when they came home and Emma was on the couch watching Aliens, but after I pointed out that she would cry if I didn't put it on, they forgave me. I still have legit no idea how she saw it the first time.
FrankTrollman wrote:When my sister was 4, the two movies she insisted on watching over and over and over again were The Wizard of Oz and Aliens. She would grab my arm and say "I wanna watch the skin coming out of the lady movie!" until I put it on. Again.
-Username17
Yeah, I feel like the things which would upset my young siblings were essentially random aside from one variable: pets. Pennywise the Clown? Sure. Chucky? My sister wasn't a fan, my brother didn't mind. Aliens & Predator were a huge hits, although they definitely didn't see them at 4.
Putting this guy in danger was a bridge too far though:
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FrankTrollman wrote:When my sister was 4, the two movies she insisted on watching over and over and over again were The Wizard of Oz and Aliens. She would grab my arm and say "I wanna watch the skin coming out of the lady movie!" until I put it on. Again.
-Username17
Aliens was advertised to kids, and they made toys. Also, Terminator. Even at the time I was confused why those were being advertised to children.
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T2 had a 10yo protagonist and was released at a time when Arnie was no longer really seen as appropriate to be cast as a robot slasher so yeah, T2 was most likely kid friendly relative to T1.
Kaelik wrote:Because powerful men get away with terrible shit, and even the public domain ones get ignored, and then, when the floodgates open, it turns out there was a goddam flood behind it.
I watched it when I was 14 (thought it was the best thing ever), and my 7-year-old brother was allowed to watch it. We'd run around the back yard with his air rifle (which was lever action, like the shotgun) trying to cock it by spinning it. It's a miracle no wrists were broken.
My fundamentalist step dad had some very weird standards on what was okay for a kid to watch. 7-year-old watching T2? A-okay. 15-year-old seeing boobs for 3 seconds? Grounded.
Maj wrote:Again... Putting this in Rocks because I'm not lost.
I didn't hate the first episode of Batwoman. The opening scene has seriously bad CGI and I had to talk myself out of judging the show for it. But I don't hate the show yet. It's pretty clear who's who. I'm interested in how it turns out.
It will most likely end up losing my interest like the other shows, but the batworld was always the most captivating for me.
On the third episode, and I actually look forward to watching it. The CGI leaves something to be desired, but it's only in a few scenes and I think the story is interesting enough to overlook.
Watchmen (the series) had me sitting at the edge of my seat from 10 minutes in until the end of the first episode. The action scenes are a lot more grounded than the Snyder movie.
So far, it is a once-every-few-years level show.
Every time you play in a "low magic world" with D&D rules (or derivates), a unicorn steps on a kitten and an orphan drops his ice cream cone.
rasmuswagner wrote:Watchmen (the series) had me sitting at the edge of my seat from 10 minutes in until the end of the first episode. The action scenes are a lot more grounded than the Snyder movie.
So far, it is a once-every-few-years level show.
Really really liked the first episode.
Jeremy Irons old horse-riding guy is Adrian Veidt, right? Even though the paper said he's dead, I guess that was just so he could quietly retire somewhere
And too bad Don Johnson's character exited in the first episode. I'd like to see more Don Johnson acting
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Koumei: and if I wanted that, I'd take some mescaline and run into the park after watching a documentary about wasps. PhoneLobster: DM : Mr Monkey doesn't like it. Eldritch : Mr Monkey can do what he is god damn told. MGuy: The point is to normalize 'my' point of view. How the fuck do you think civil rights occurred? You think things got this way because people sat down and fucking waited for public opinion to change?
FrankTrollman wrote:When my sister was 4, the two movies she insisted on watching over and over and over again were The Wizard of Oz and Aliens. She would grab my arm and say "I wanna watch the skin coming out of the lady movie!" until I put it on. Again.
-Username17
Aliens was advertised to kids, and they made toys. Also, Terminator. Even at the time I was confused why those were being advertised to children.
I had toys from both. But it was a while before I saw either.
Cuz apparently I gotta break this down for you dense motherfuckers- I'm trans feminine nonbinary. My pronouns are they/them.
Winnah wrote:No, No. 'Prak' is actually a Thri Kreen impersonating a human and roleplaying himself as a D&D character. All hail our hidden insect overlords.
FrankTrollman wrote:In Soviet Russia, cosmic horror is the default state.
You should gain sanity for finding out that the problems of a region are because there are fucking monsters there.
Meikle641 wrote:Saw the Zombieland sequel. It was pretty solid. Definitely wasn't bad. I recommend.
The original Zombieland was the movie my now wife and I saw on our first date ten years ago. We would've watched the Zombieland sequel on our anniversary even if it was just Emma Stone and Jesse Eisenberg reading the phonebook at each other. But we both laughed. It was good and I would recommend people seeing it even if you didn't have a deep connection to the first movie.
Casablanca was a good movie. It's a good thing nobody's tried to remake that with a modern cast and a director who wants to go a different direction with it.
Iduno wrote:Casablanca was a good movie. It's a good thing nobody's tried to remake that with a modern cast and a director who wants to go a different direction with it.
"Zach Snyder's Casablanca"
It is a good movie!
And when you know that it was filmed before the Allied invasion of North Africa - when the actors began singing La Marseillaise those are real emotions in a very uncertain world.
Iduno wrote:Casablanca was a good movie. It's a good thing nobody's tried to remake that with a modern cast and a director who wants to go a different direction with it.
"Zach Snyder's Casablanca"
It is a good movie!
And when you know that it was filmed before the Allied invasion of North Africa - when the actors began singing La Marseillaise those are real emotions in a very uncertain world.
Yeah, I'm assuming the remake rumor is an internet hoax.