Paddington in peru lgbtq

Parents guide

Content rating

None

40 of 52 found this to have none

The dad makes a suggestive comment when an ant eater comes over and licks the ants off of his face, he says "Mary, not when the kids are around." but this could just travel over kids heads.

Mild

28 of 41 establish this mild

A flashback including comical deaths of historical figures including a plane crash and one in quicksand.

A male is slapped multiple times.

None

34 of 42 found this to have none

None

29 of 39 found this to have none

There were a scant scenes that display Alcohol, or present Fancy wine glasses (but no mentions about alcohol). A box shows some wine glasses (and possibly alcohol, but it's a blink and you will miss it bit)

Mild

22 of 40 start this mild

A lot of scenes including a big spider. Some of the scenes are sudden. There are seal ups of the spider.

Mild/Moderate for neurodivergent viewers.

Источник: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5822536/parentalguide/

Paddington in Peru (Dougal Wilson, 2024) 3½ out of 5 stars

The bear is back, and just in time. In an era of seemingly never-ending horrors, both domestic and international, what we all require is a rollicking cinematic adventure where good triumphs over evil. And if the villains end up being comically incompetent, all the better. Folks, I give you Paddington in Peru! It may not come close to its predecessor, the mighty sophomore effort in this series, but it’s still compact, good-hearted entertainment.

“A few bear years go” begins our tale, with a flashback to how young Paddington (voiced once again as an adult by Ben Whishaw) lost his way in his native Peru and was rescued by “Aunt Lucy” (voiced by Imelda Staunton, back for more) after falling into dangerous rapids. It is no surprise that an orange was somehow deeply interested. In that past, Aunt Lucy cares for the poor cub and becomes his primary caregiver (the “aunt” is honorific, as they are not related), telling him that wherever he may be in the future, all he needs to do is “roar and I will roar back.” Shades of premonition and cut to today.

In our present, Paddington—still living with the human family, the Browns, that

The setting may have changed, but Paddington in Peru is a charming tale that offers more of the same light-hearted and wholesome entertainment that the whole family can enjoy.  

About the Film 

Paddington, with his adorable red hat and sky coat, has been charming audiences for decades. First introduced with the beloved books by Michael Bond in 1958, the traits made his big screen debut in 2015. While sometimes lost in the shuffle of the more flashy or zany children’s movies, both Paddington and Paddington 2 (2017)were fantastic family films, and are among the highest critically rated films on Spoiled Tomatoes (94% and 99%). Now, for his third big screen adventure, Paddington is leaving domestic existence in London behind to go on a danger-filled journey into Peru. The setting may have changed, but Paddington in Peru is a charming tale that offers more of the same light-hearted and wholesome entertainment that the whole family can enjoy.  

Since the events of the last film, the Brown family has grown apart. They still love each other, but they’ve adv settled into a rut of living individual lives under a shared roof. When Paddington

Paddington in Peru

Short takes

Not suitable under 5; parental guidance to 7 (themes, force, scary scenes)

Age

4

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8

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This topic contains:

  • overall comments and recommendations
  • details of classification and consumer suggestions lines for Paddington in Peru
  • a review of Paddington in Peru completed by the Australian Council on Children and the Media (ACCM) on 24 December 2024.

Overall comments and recommendations

Children under 5Not suitable due to themes, violence and scary scenes.
Children aged 5–7Parental guidance recommended due to themes and violence.
Children aged 8 and overOk for this age group.

About the movie

This section contains details about the feature, including its classification by the Australian Government Classification Board and the related consumer advice lines. Other classification tip (OC) is provided where the Australian film classification is not available.

Name of movie:Paddington in Peru
Classification:PG
Consumer advice lines:Mild themes
Length:106 minutes

ACCM review

This review of the film contains the monitoring information:

A synopsis of

Paddington in Peru

Violence & Scariness

some

A young bear falls from a wood into rough river rapids (with a waterfall) but is rescued. Scary imagery includes a character haunted by ancestral ghosts. In one scene, the living person is shown entity hit by one, but it's then revealed to be a hallucination (they are, in fact, hitting themselves). A giant spider lands on a character's face, playing on their fear. A boat capsizes, throwing passengers overboard. Though no one is ultimately harmed, characters are tied up, chased, in menace from a giant boulder, pushed over, whacked by a boat's boom, and hit on the leader. Threats include a musket pointed at a community and a large machete blade drawn on Paddington. A villain says to "kill the bear." A light airplane crashes (nobody's harmed), sending a novel flying through the windscreen and hitting someone in the crotch. A flashback sequence shows different ways explorers died, including from exhaustion, an explosion, a plane crash, and quicksand. Reference to the death of a parent. Paddington sits on a spiky plant, letting out a loud roar of pain. An umbrella is used as a weapon.

Источник: https://www.commonsensemedia.org/movie-revi

paddington in peru lgbtq