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Common Sense NoteParents need to know that this film isn't for kids. It showcases difficult concepts and images, including mass murder, rape, homosexuality and homophobia, and the sensationalizing effects of media.
Images include the Clutter family crime scene (bloody bodies and furniture), as well as several reenactments of violence: shooting, smothering, and an unnerving scene in a prison cell, where inmate threatens visitor. Execution by hanging shown explicitly, as is a passionate, illicit kiss in a prison cell.
This movie was shocking and brutal and way more watchable than Capote. No disrespect to the artists who worked on that film. Phillip Seymore Hoffman was a. Infamous is a 2006 American drama film based on George Plimpton's 1997 book, Truman Capote: In Which Various Friends, Enemies, Acquaintances, and Detractors Recall His Turbulent Career.
Characters make repeated references to sex and rape, some joking, some menacing. Characters smoke lots of cigarettes and drink often. Both prisoners and Manhattan socialites use foul language ('f-k' most frequently). SexualContentTruman's stories and jokes tend to be bawdy; he behaves flamboyantly (small-towners mistake him for a woman); Truman sends Perry porn magazines in prison (glimpse of covers); frequent sexual slang; references to Dick's desire to rape the Clutter daughter before he killed her.
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ViolenceExplicit images of the crime scene (bloody mattress) and Clutter family bodies (bound and brutalized); shootings occur in flashbacks and out-of-frame (guns pointed off screen); one disturbing scene shows Perry threatening Truman with rape in his prison cell; Dick's hanging at the film's end is explicit and harrowing (Perry's takes place off screen). LanguageFrequent uses of 'f-k' (30+); plus other profanity ('s-t,' 'bitch,' 'a-hole,' variations of 'c-cker'). SocialBehaviorWhile the protagonists are charismatic and compelling, they are (with the exception of Harper Lee) also arrogant, ambitious, and deceitful, disdaining their social 'inferiors' the story follows Capote's eventually tragic efforts to 'fit in' with the wealthy socialite crowd. ConsumerismNot applicable Drugs / Tobacco /AlcoholUpper-crusty 1950s-style social drinking and drunkenness (martinis, gin and tonic, scotch, champagne); reference to father 'drinking himself to death' frequent cigarette smoking, some cigars.
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