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All teen and kid reviews for Requiem for a Dream

Age
15
Average rating based on 10 kid and teen reviews:
  • 70% say there's too much drinking, drugs, or smoking
  • 60% say sexual content is an issue
  • 50% say there are positive messages
  • 40% say language is an issue
Teen, 14 years old
February 10, 2010
 
Good messages about drugs, extremely depressing and graphic with sex and language
First of all even this movie has a good message about drugs, it's very depressing and sexually graphic and contains muchos language. They say f--k, motherf--ker, s--t, b-tch, a--, hell, etc. It is not pervasively violent, but the violence that is shown is pretty strong (shootings, torture, etc.). The sex is way graphic. It shoes female nudity (full frontal) and shows lesbian and straight sex acts (along with prostitution in the unrated version). Drug use is constant and graphic but has a good message about what drugs can do to any person (black or white, male or female, 10 or 80). It is very depressing and there is no hope for any of the characters. Iffy for ages 17+, if i had kids I wouldn't let them see until they moved out.

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Teen, 15 years old
October 12, 2011
 
Amazing movie, if you can handle it.
This is an amazing movie. I first saw it when I was in middle school, and it has changed my life. What do children see when they turn on the tv? Something glamorizing drinking and drug use. This movie tells it like it is, the addiction, and a glimpse at the withdrawal process. This movie will keep teenagers away from drugs much more than a talk with their parent will. There is intense sexual situations that will not be appropriate for most children, it all depends on what you deem alright for them. It is a movie about drugs, but the only scene that disturbed me was the main character injecting into an infected hole in his arm. Overall, I think that everyone should see this at one point in their life, you'll never forget it.

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Kid, 13 years old
July 2, 2010
 
This is really good movie. I loved it! My heart was crying and I had really sad time when I saw this movie. Because the drugs every thing was ruined, that's the postive message and this film show the woman's bottom part and there was so many drugs

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Teen, 14 years old
July 15, 2011
 
Great movie, dark, violent, disturbing, sexual, and gritty.
This is a dark, dream-like motion picture. It involves various addictions in which the characters are driven to tragic ends. An old mother is driven to a tragic insanity, and there are scenes of disturbing hallucinations, scary violence, and some excessive drug use and somewhat graphic sex scenes, not visually, but it is graphic from what the viewer imagines, as one female goes into sex shows for prostitution. It is a great movie, but only for the most advanced, mature tweens and teens.

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Teen, 15 years old
July 30, 2011
 
One of the most depressingly real movies ever made
By the end of this film I felt both unbelievably depressed and horribly disturbed. Thats not to say this is a bad movie. It's the opposite. This is an amazing movie, but is filled with bloody violence, pervasive language, explicit drug use and graphic sex scenes, including a female on female sex show and lower female nudity. (although this is non sexual) If your looking for an uplifting movie about people overcoming struggles to find hope, look somewhere else, because this film has no happy endings and no hope. Watch it and you will feel empty inside.

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Teen, 16 years old
October 25, 2011
 
Take it, watch it, hate it, love it, finish it
If you look around and see all the movies that have come out in the last decade, you will see that most of the big box office hits have been big budget action flicks like Transformers. In addition to them being big movies, they also have no real ability to be called a work of art. They’re common, predictable, and uncreative. You do, however get the golden gem every so often. Examples of one of these gems are films like, Black Swan, The Road, Precious, and The Kings Speech. One film I think that can stand out from those is the universally and critically acclaimed film, Requiem for a Dream. It’s somewhat of an older film, having been made in 2000, but sends a kind of message without anything that would annoy you. Having been beautifully crafted by the same genius who directed Pi, Darren Aronofsky, I can say without any doubt, that this is one of the greatest movies of the 21st century. The film opens with a housewife is chaining her television to the radiator in her dingy apartment. When her son comes to take it (intending to sell it for drug money) she locks herself in the bathroom. However, through some negotiating, she gives up the key for the lock and her son is on his way. As you suspect, it’s a routine that they go through all the time. After selling the TV, you see that Harry (Sara Goldfarb’s son) in currently living with his longtime girlfriend, Marion and that their best friend Tyrone, who are all addicted to heroin. Not only that, but Sara is addicted to something as well; TV and sugar. But when Sara receives a phone call from her favorite game show, she decides to give up on the food and go on a diet Meanwhile, Harry, Marion, and Tyrone get their hands on some very expensive and nice heroin and decide to sell it so they can make their “fortune”. The only problem is that when Tyrone is put in jail for being affiliated with a gang dealing drugs, they spend all the money to post bail for Tyrone. Later, when trying to get back on track, the trio discovers that some new “stuff” isn’t come to New York any time soon because of law crack down. In order to get more “stuff” Harry and Tyrone set out to Florida with the money that Marion had just gotten by having sex with her old physiatrist. In the meantime, Sara has become addicted to appearing on her game show. The problem is that she has become addicted to her diet pills and starts to take more in one dosage because “"The pills don't work so good anymore." When she begins to hallucinate that her refrigerator is out to get her, she begins to lose all her grip on reality. Eventually she is brought into an asylum when medical treatment isn’t working for her, so they have to use extreme measures that render her incapable of emotion. During all this, Harry, on his way to Florida with Tyrone, gets his arm infected from all his injections and gets taken to a hospital, when the police catch up to him and Tyrone. Unfortunately ends up needing his arm amputated to save his life, and both Tyrone and Harry are thrown in jail. Marion waits for Harry to return but can’t keep waiting after a few days so she goes to a pimp and becomes a prostitute in exchange for heroin. As you can see, the whole movie is one downward spiral from one hell to the next. The movie was given the worthless NC-17 rating by the MPAA; rejecting it, Artisan Entertainment asked theaters to enforce an adults-only policy. After being criticized by the general public for being too graphic and grim, another outcry was going against what people were saying. They thought that the movie was one that was true to the world and how drugs worked you down. Not only is the acting superb (in a grimy and grim sort of way), but the cinematic were phenomenal. The camera in positioned as to give the view some kind of wristed view from the characters perspective. Also, Aronofsky uses powerful close-ups to depict the drug usage. First we see the pills, or fix, filling the screen, then the injection, swallowing or sniffing that blots out the world. Then the pupils of their eyes dilate; all done with an acute exaggeration of sounds. These sequences are done in fast-motion, to show how quickly the drugs take effect and how disappointingly soon they fade. The in-between times show an edge toward desperation and hopelessness.

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Teen, 14 years old
May 29, 2011
 
A Masterpiece of Depression.
Though this film is a stunning masterpiece of modern times, it is one of the most highly innapropriate mainstream dramas I have ever come across, including a highly disturbing scene of prostitution that may leave you crying and speechless, one scene of visceral sex, a lower-frontal nude scene, and many more factors that just make the film "not for kids".

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Teen, 16 years old
March 2, 2011
 
drugs throughout

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Teen, 17 years old
November 20, 2011
 
Very thought-provoking and debate inducing
This is another clear example of media which, even though fueled with extreme scenes, is positive to ones formation - it stimulates debates around themes which are very common to the teenager and it improves its relation with what surrounds him - especially if this teenager lives in a urban area. Amazing movie, one of the best portrayals of the drug scene/culture.

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Teen, 18 years old
December 12, 2010
 
In my opinion, the most important movie of the new millennium
The movie is without a doubt disturbing, however the film is beautifully made and well acted. Children and teens who are capable of understanding the moral, as well as understanding that it is, after all, fake should be fine. All people should watch this movie at some point.

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