Why is footloose 2011 rated pg 13




















A father slaps his daughter. A character is hit in the head with a beer bottle. Car windows are broken during a fight. Sexual Content: Characters perform suggestive dance moves. A girl engages in passionate kissing and intimate activities after being dared by her partner. Characters discuss their sexual relations. Teens kiss. Females wear revealing and scanty clothing. Male teens make several offensive comments about females. Language: The script contains several crude expressions for sex, vulgar anatomical language, frequent scatological slang, and profanities.

Terms of Deity, as well as sexual innuendo, are used along with brief racial comments and sexual slurs. Teens are killed in an accident where alcohol is supposedly involved. Underage characters fake their way into a bar. A teen carries alcohol in his car and drinks some when he is upset. A character is set up to look like a drug seller. Young adults use illegal drugs and then drive under the influence. But for the most part, everything else is familiar -- and for once, that's a good thing.

Wormald has an elfin James Dean quality that makes him cute but not distractingly edgy or sexy. He's got a winning smile and amazing dancing skills better than Kevin Bacon 's , and his scenes teaching pal Willard Teller channels the best of the late Chris Penn 's performance to boogie are again some of the best in the movie.

Hough sheds her ballroom-dancing pro persona although there's a joke thrown in just for Dancing with the Stars fans to seem like a real actress, but her portrayal takes a backseat to Wormald and Teller's. Dennis Quaid 's minister isn't as fire-and-brimstone intense as the original's John Lithgow , but his tone is just the right balance of conflicted and protective.

While this remake may not be the cultural touchstone that Bacon's version became, it's toe-tapping fun for teens and nostalgic parents. Families can talk about the relationship between "authority" and Ren. Is he rightfully accused as a troublemaker?

When is it right to question authority? Should teens be allowed to complain about the rules and regulations imposed on them? Are there realistic consequences? What's the difference between Ariel's relationship with Chuck and her relationship with Ren? Why does Ren tell her he won't kiss her at first? Teens: Do you think some people hook up just to make their exes angry? How is Ren different than the average teen guy?

Those familiar with the original movie can discuss the differences between the two and the ways the new one updated the story. How is the version faithful? How is it different? Which do you prefer? Common Sense Media's unbiased ratings are created by expert reviewers and aren't influenced by the product's creators or by any of our funders, affiliates, or partners. See how we rate. Streaming options powered by JustWatch.

Common Sense Media, a nonprofit organization, earns a small affiliate fee from Amazon or iTunes when you use our links to make a purchase. Thank you for your support. Our ratings are based on child development best practices. We display the minimum age for which content is developmentally appropriate.

The star rating reflects overall quality. Learn how we rate. Parents' Ultimate Guide to Support our work! A man tells another man that a teen boy had watched his mother die slowly from leukemia. A teen girl explains to a teen boy that her brother had died in a car accident.

A teen boy knocks into another teen boy, and one of the boys make a mock threat that the other should not wear camouflage because he "might get shot. A man jokingly tells a teen boy that hamburgers contain beef and opossum meat. A teen boy jokes that a teen girl's father is going to "take her out to the wood shed," implying a joke about the father beating the teen girl.

A teen boy screams along to a song and playfully scares two young girls, who run away screaming. A woman playfully punches a man's arm after he looks at a teen girl suggestively. A teen boy smashes a window. LANGUAGE 4 - 2 sexual references, 16 scatological terms, 16 anatomical terms 3 mild , 11 mild obscenities, 2 derogatory terms for homosexuals, name-calling too big in the britches, old man, choirboy, preacher's daughter, little guy, punk, Yankee Doodle, numb [anatomical term], hayseed, animal, bully, deadbeat, smart-aleck, Barney Fife, Huckleberry, crazy, hussy, [scatological term] ant, sweetcakes, slut, lug nut, small town, dork, idiots , exclamations hot dang, shut up, daggone , 5 religious exclamations.

SUBSTANCE USE - We see a young man smoking a marijuana cigarette and he jokes about the smoke going on a teen girl, a young man hands a teen boy a marijuana cigarette after discussing smoking marijuana, a teen boy hands a young man a marijuana cigarette and a man shouts at the boy and chases him to a bathroom where the boy flushes the marijuana cigarette in the toilet, three men accuse a teen boy of having a marijuana cigarette and the teen boy says that he does not do drugs and would take a drug test to prove it, and a teen boy jokingly asks another teen boy what he was "smoking" and he explains that he used the word as an adjective.

Throughout the movie we see teenagers drinking, teens drink at a party and are then in a drunk-driving accident, a teen boy is seen drinking beer and we see teenagers drinking presumably alcohol from plastic cups, a young man acts intoxicated and is asked by his teenage girlfriend if he had "smoked too much," a teen boy asks a woman if they serve liquor at a bar and the woman says the bar does not serve alcohol, a man reads aloud an ordinance being passed that prohibits drinking and illicit drugs at functions with teens, a man jokes with a teen boy that the secret ingredient in a recipe is bourbon, and a song is heard with lyrics about the singer getting a fake ID so he could go to a bar.

Determination is needed to overcome obstacles. Be aware that while we do our best to avoid spoilers it is impossible to disguise all details and some may reveal crucial plot elements.

Is Kevin Bacon in Footloose ? Is Footloose a true story? Footloose is based on a true story. In the small town of Elmore City, Oklahoma faced a community crisis. The seniors of Elmore High School wanted to plan a senior prom, but dances were against the law thanks to a not-forgotten ordinance from the late s that forbade dancing within the city limits.

Where does Footloose take place? In the upcoming remake, Footloose , the action takes place in Beaumont, Tennessee, and the production was filmed in Georgia. The original Footloose was in a fictional town of Bomont, UT and was filmed in various locations in Utah.

Who choreographed Footloose ? Who is the girl in the new Footloose?



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