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Oct '23
I never played the games, but I did watch Willy's Wonderland recently. That might have been a more kid appropriate plotline, had they toned down that R-rating just a tad. But since that simple plotted movie already exists, Five Nights needed to be different.

Blumhouse tackled this video game adaption and pushed it pretty hard for its PG-13 rating. We're given a troubled protagonist struggling with an unresolved child kidnapping, custody battles, unemployment, pill addiction... that's a bit much for a kid movie, right? Let alone the implied violence of getting one's head sawed apart, or being gruesomely assimilated into an animatronic... or the actual violence of rotting corpses, cuts, stabbings, and people getting ripped in half. Not bad, Blumhouse. You made me just a little bit unsettled there for a while. Not because I deem it graphic, but because kids are decensitized enough to deem it as casual. If kids can handle this without issue, our old go-to slasher franchises ought to be a piece of cake for them to sit through.


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Tommix says:
#6, Reply to #1

Jan 6
The 1978 Halloween is almost unbelievably tame, if you think about it, by our standards. People forget how much of its popularity came from its music. The technology to create that soundtrack hadn't been along for very long, and those sounds were quite novel, and quite terrifying. Jamie Lee did a good job, of course, but without that music the movie probably would have just come and gone, without making too much of a splash.



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