-By Katy Abel
Whether you take your kids to see Disneys Dinosaur
or rent Snow White for them to watch at home, its
important to remember that the very nature of movie-going
has undergone big changes for children.
- Screen images are more intense than ever. The powerful
tool of 3D animation, while enhancing the visual experience
for adults, can make young children feel overwhelmed
and scared.
- The deliberate blurring of fact and fantasy ? fake?dinosaurs,
for example, rumbling across real?landscapes
-- can confuse kids.
- Many children experience movies by watching them
on video without an adult present to help them sort
out or process?the stories and pictures they
see.
While few would argue that moviemakers deliberately
set out to terrorize kids, there are definite reasons
why scary stuff makes its way into family fare.
"Most of these animated adventure features are
really nightmare fodder for young children," says
Joanne Cantor, University of Wisconsin professor and
author of Mommy, Im Scared: How TV & Movies
Frighten Children and What We Can Do to Protect Them
(for more on Cantors research, go to www.joannecantor.com).
"The reason is they want to make a movie thats
going to appeal to older kids as well," says Cantor.
Clearly, broader appeal means bigger bucks at the box
office. In the quest for profits, the concerns of parents
are easily swept aside.
What Scares Kids: An Ages & Stages Guide for
Parents
If you've given up on the MPAA ratings system and want
to tackle the ratings game yourself, you'll need two
things: detailed descriptions of a movies content
(a thorough reading of current reviews) and developmental
information on what is likely to frighten your child
at various ages. In her book, Mommy, Im Scared,
Professor Cantor offers parents the following guidelines:
Ages 2-7: "Seeing is Believing"
How things look will have the greatest effect on many
kids in this age group. Visual images ?monsters or scary
animals ?can be deeply disturbing, "whether realistic
or fantastic," says Cantor. By age six or seven,
kids begin to understand the difference between fantasy
and reality, but may still be disturbed by animation
as well as live action images. Kids in this age group
may also be upset by movies that show the death of a
parent (The Lion King), the physical transformation
of characters (Snow White), and natural disasters (The
Wizard of Oz).
If you dont want a child in this age group to
see a particular movie, you might: Offer an alternative
movie, rather than "just say no."
Ages 7 to 12: "Reality Sets In"
Children this age are going to be less disturbed by
cartoon images, but are still upset by some realistic-looking
threats and dangers, especially when movies depict scary
stuff involving kids (child kidnappings, abuse, or issues
that a child may have seen or heard about in the news).
If you dont want a child in this age group to
see a particular movie, you might: Say something like,
"Lots of kids have had problems with this one."
That way, your child is less likely to feel immature,
or singled out as the only kid unable to "handle"
the flick.
Ages 13 and Up: "Frightened by What We Dont
Know"
Many teens will be troubled by movies about aliens,
occult forces, demonic possession, or "unexplained
phenomena," says Cantor, who is now studying the
effects of The Blair Witch Project on teens. Scary movies
produced in a documentary or made-to-look-real format
can be very frightening for adolescents.
If you dont want a teen to see a particular movie,
you might: Say something like, "Remember when you
saw (such-and-such film) and it upset you? Why dont
you wait until it comes out on video?" Or, if a
teen seems determined to see a movie with friends, remind
him or her, "Remember, you can always leave the
theater, and its not a big deal."
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