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Charlie's Angels - PG-13

Charlie's Angels
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4 stars

Edgy girl power fun. You go, girls!

Rating: PG-13 for violence, brief language, and sexual situations Studio: Columbia Tristar Directed By: McG Release Date: 11/03/2000 Genre: Action/adventure

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Common Sense Note

Parents should know that in addition to a lot of "action-style" violence (very little blood), the movie has drinking, smoking, and some profanity and innuendo. One of the angels is shown waking up after a one-night-stand, clearly intending never to see the guy again. She later has a sexual encounter that turns out to have been a mistake.

Families can talk about how Dylan's absent father affected her life, especially her decision to work for a man who would never meet her. Knox, too, was affected by an absent father. Why don't the Angels want the men in their lives to know what they do? What would happen if they told them? Even movies as essentially silly as this one can also provide good lessons in problem-solving and ethics. How do they break down the problem of getting access to the GPS software into solvable pieces? Why won't the angels give Knox access to the GPS software?

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Common Sense Review

Reviewed By: Nell Minow

CHARLIE'S ANGELS manages to fulfill the middle-school-age fantasies of both boys and girls and to make it clear that it doesn't take itself too seriously. The result is a lot of silly popcorn fun. This is the kind of movie in which the action sequences may be sped up, but the heroines' hair is always in slow motion, a sort of Josie and the Pussycats crossed with Mission: Impossible.

The Angels are three fabulously gorgeous, often scantily clad women who are as brilliant as they are beautiful, and who can kick-box five guys at a time. They work as detectives, solving cases brought to them by the mysterious Charlie, who communicates with them only by speakerphone. Dylan (co-producer Drew Barrymore), Alex (Lucy Liu), and Natalie (Cameron Diaz) are so technologically adept that they can tug a few wires and make a fast food drive-through speaker sound like an MP3 track. They'll stop in the middle of tracking a suspect to give each other flirting pointers -- and stop in the middle of a life-or-death kickboxing fight to take a phone call from a boyfriend.

Charlie's latest client is a software firm whose programming genius, Eric Knox (Sam Rockwell), has been kidnapped. His voice identification program, if combined with global positioning technology, could be used to track anyone, even Charlie. So the Angels are off to the rescue.

Just as in the old TV show, this requires many costume changes -- the Angels go undercover as belly dancers, a race car pit crew, corporate consultants, and lederhosen-clad messengers. It also involves placing the Angels in jeopardy every 17 minutes or so. But these Angels don't use guns. They take on bad guys with their wits and their feet.

The Angels have so much fun that it's impossible not to enjoy them. The fight scenes were staged by the same person who did The Matrix, and the Angels get a huge charge out of their suspended-air kicks and chops. A soundtrack of cheesy 1970s music ("Brandy," "You Make Me Feel Like Dancin'," "Heaven Must Be Missing an Angel") and sly digs like an airline passenger disgusted by the prospect of watching T.J. Hooker: The Movie keep things lighthearted. The Angels are all terrific, especially Diaz, whose pure pleasure in doing horrible retro disco dances lights up an entire room. Bill Murray has some good moments as their sidekick, Bosley.

Families who see this movie should talk about the way that the Angels use their looks as well as their brains and muscles. In some ways, a beautiful woman is impossible to miss, but in other ways she is invisible, because she is not perceived as a threat. And when they dress up in German costume and pretend to be delivering a telegram, their obvious enjoyment shows that they're the ones exploiting the befuddled recipient rather than the other way around.

Families who enjoy this movie will also like the sequel, the original TV show, and other TV classics like Honey West, Get Christy Love! and Police Woman.

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Content
CS adults kids

Sexual Content

Innuendo, character wakes up after a one-night stand, has sex with another man.

Violence

Lots of peril and action-style fighting (no blood); the angels do not use guns.

Language

Brief bad language.

Message

 

Social Behavior

Strong female characters (though they get a bit giddy around boyfriends).

 

Commercialism

 

Drug/Alcohol/Tobacco

Drinking and smoking, brief comic inebriation.

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