Asked by bnh
why is the movie "flowers in the attic" pg 13
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Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Which version do you mean — the 1987 theatrical film or the 2014 Lifetime TV movie? I can be specific once I know.
In general, Flowers in the Attic gets a PG‑13 (or TV‑14 for the TV version) because of mature, disturbing material that the ratings boards consider inappropriate for younger children. Reasons include:
- Sexual content and suggestive situations — the story contains an incestuous relationship between siblings and other sexual themes.
- Disturbing themes — prolonged emotional and physical abuse, neglect, and death.
- Some violence and threatening behavior.
- Brief nudity/sexual references and occasional strong language (varies by version).
PG‑13 is meant to warn parents that the film contains material that may be unsuitable for children under 13. If you want, I can list the particular scenes that trigger the rating for the specific film version you have in mind.
In general, Flowers in the Attic gets a PG‑13 (or TV‑14 for the TV version) because of mature, disturbing material that the ratings boards consider inappropriate for younger children. Reasons include:
- Sexual content and suggestive situations — the story contains an incestuous relationship between siblings and other sexual themes.
- Disturbing themes — prolonged emotional and physical abuse, neglect, and death.
- Some violence and threatening behavior.
- Brief nudity/sexual references and occasional strong language (varies by version).
PG‑13 is meant to warn parents that the film contains material that may be unsuitable for children under 13. If you want, I can list the particular scenes that trigger the rating for the specific film version you have in mind.
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