Parents' Guide to Annie (2014)

Movie PG 2014 118 minutes
Annie (2014) Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Yvonne Condes By Yvonne Condes , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 7+

Update of classic musical is cute but a bit hokey.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 7+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 7+

Based on 57 parent reviews

age 7+

Based on 93 kid reviews

Kids say that the movie is a fun and catchy musical with positive messages, but there are mixed opinions about its suitability for young audiences due to some scary scenes and adult themes, including drinking and mild language. While many viewers loved the modern twist and found it a great family movie, others felt it didn't live up to the original, and some parents expressed concerns over certain scenes being frightening for younger children.

  • catchy songs
  • family friendly
  • modern twist
  • mixed suitability
  • frightening scenes
  • adult themes
Summarized with AI

What's the Story?

ANNIE is a modernized take on the Little Orphan Annie story, with updated music and a present-day New York setting. In this version, Annie (Quvenzhané Wallis) is a foster child who's living with the vile Miss Hannigan (Cameron Diaz) when cell phone tycoon Will Stacks (an updated version of Daddy Warbucks, played by Jamie Foxx) saves her from being run over by a truck. His shady campaign manager (Bobby Cannavale) decides that Stacks needs a child to make him more human, so Annie leaves her hard-knock life for a penthouse apartment. Annie sings her heart out, goes to fancy Hollywood parties, and continues her search for her birth parents.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say ( 57 ):
Kids say ( 93 ):

The best scene in this generally likable musical is the first one. A little redheaded girl sings an inspiring poem, and you think it will be the same old story; then she sits down, and the Annie of this movie, Wallis, appears. She does her school report on social class differences, and you get the idea that this Annie will be much different than the one in the classic tale. But while it's refreshing to see a new, modern take on Annie -- as well as any kids' movie that talks about class and poverty -- Annie doesn't quite live up to its potential. It misses many opportunities to build the characters and offer teachable moments, instead opting for cheesy dialogue and endless panoramic views of New York City. The lead characters lack passion and emotion; we never fully understand why Stacks is so hard or why Grace is such a workaholic, making it hard to embrace the family they'll become. It drags a bit and is convoluted and hokey at the end.

Still, Wallis (Beasts of the Southern Wild) is impressive -- she outshines her foster dad in every scene. And Diaz is fun as the wretched, aging almost-pop star, Miss Hannigan. Jay-Z and Sia updated the music and added original songs which, although sometimes great, upstage the rest of the movie. Annie isn't perfect, but it's an entertaining musical with a good mix of the old-fashioned Annie spirit and modern life.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about Annie's choices. Do you think she was justified in sneaking out and lying to Miss Hannigan because Miss Hannigan wasn't very nice?

  • Which characters are intended to be role models? How can you tell? Could they have done more/other things to better demonstrate their positive qualities to kids?

  • For fans of the original, how does this one compare? What's different, and what's the same? Which do you like better?

  • What role does media play in the story? How does that make Annie and her friends' life different than it was for the original Annie?

  • How does the movie depict foster parents? Do you think it's intended to be realistic?

Movie Details

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