A vague disclaimer is nobody's friend.

Willow ,'Conversations with Dead People'


Natter 45: Smooth as Billy Dee Williams.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Jesse - Jul 31, 2006 7:41:38 am PDT #9482 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I know I saw Terror in the Aisles [link] in the theater, so I guess I was 10, which kind of explains why my parents weren't thrilled about the entire proposition -- someone else's father took us. It wasn't really that scary, though, because you lost so much of the context. And we were always renting horror movies for sleepovers. I don't know when kids cross the line between being too little and thinking those movies are cool.


Laura - Jul 31, 2006 7:42:36 am PDT #9483 of 10002
Our wings are not tired.

The boys watch scary movies with the gore. I don't let them play MA rated video games. They love horror movies and don't get scared or anything. When it comes to R rated movies I either get a review from a trusted friend or watch it myself first.

Kids are different and parents should know what bothers them and what doesn't. PotC with pirates was great stuff for the boys. PotC without pirates sounded way too upsetting for them.

With violence I tend to not mind them watching the obviously fictional stuff like SciFi while I shy away from graphic violence in a realistic setting like war. With sex I don't mind them watching sex in movies when presented in a "normal" manner. It's all very subjective.

Since they are "that age" boys they love all the movies geared toward 12yo boys. And they can watch over and over and over again.


Frankenbuddha - Jul 31, 2006 7:43:34 am PDT #9484 of 10002
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

I remember when I was little my parents were watching The Exorcist on TV (so it would have been heavily edited, but still)

"Your mother sews socks in heck!"

I don't remember how old I was, but I was freaked out by some version of A Christmas Carol when Scrooge goes to hell.

I'll be it's the Albert Finney musical version because a) I saw that in the theater (that and YELLOW SUBMARINE are the first two movies I remember seeing in a theater my life) and remember that sequence vividly, and b) they always, always, ALWAYS cut that scene out when they showed it on television.

That said, it was the reveal of the ghost of Xmas future as a skeleton that really freaked me out with that one.


Vortex - Jul 31, 2006 7:43:48 am PDT #9485 of 10002
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

oh, yeah, I totally grok that the parent should be able to decide what is appropriate for their child, but if the kid is clearly frightened, or disturbing other patrons, they should leave.


Aims - Jul 31, 2006 7:44:18 am PDT #9486 of 10002
Shit's all sorts of different now.

With sex I don't mind them watching sex in movies when presented in a "normal" manner.

::makes note to send porn to Laura's boys::


Laura - Jul 31, 2006 7:52:32 am PDT #9487 of 10002
Our wings are not tired.

::makes note to send porn to Laura's boys::

Hee. I showed them the "Internet is for Porn" video and I thought they would split a gut. [link] That was made for my boys.

There were kids at the theater when we saw PotC that were too young. Stupid parents. Like the 3 year old kid that cried half the film.


Allyson - Jul 31, 2006 7:58:46 am PDT #9488 of 10002
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

I just told a nobel lauriat that "Everything's 5x5, the check went out on Thursday."

The Buffyisms sometimes come out of nowhere, like a burp or my Boston accent.


tommyrot - Jul 31, 2006 7:58:54 am PDT #9489 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

ION, in Minneapolis, Signs of the Cephalopod Underground

A reader discovered this fascinating graffiti in downtown Minneapolis, near the transit center on Hennepin Avenue.


Jesse - Jul 31, 2006 8:00:37 am PDT #9490 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

With violence I tend to not mind them watching the obviously fictional stuff like SciFi while I shy away from graphic violence in a realistic setting like war. With sex I don't mind them watching sex in movies when presented in a "normal" manner. It's all very subjective.

You make a lot of sense -- I know I was way more freaked out by Platoon, which was several years later (and I saw it in a second-run theater), than any of the ridiculous horror movies. Horror movies are good clean fun!


sarameg - Jul 31, 2006 8:03:26 am PDT #9491 of 10002

I recall getting spooked by The Exorcist on cable when I was 14 ish. But that may have been more because I was babysitting late at night, it was storming pretty badly, branches kept falling against the house and there was a high school party down the street which meant random people would occasionally wander drunkenly into the yard, lit up by the strobing lightning.

I saw a lot of the Elm Street and Halloween flicks around 9-13 because my best friend at the time loved that stuff, and when her older brothers' watched us, they'd totally let us rent those. In retrospect, I recall more how stupid and gross they were than scary.

I don't like horror much at all.