Thursday, March 12, 2026

LET KIDS BE KIDS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!......


As i do not  have kids  !!!!!! ...never  wanted them ........ after   what i saw my.........   fucking P.O.S shit    family .........do  to my parents   .......it was  abhorrent on  ever  fucking level .........   never  ever   got peace ........my poor parents......  tortured  all the  fucking time  !!!!!!  ......if it was not one  thing........ it was  another !!!! ........i feel well and truly blessed......... i had an amazing childhood .......  thanks to my parents ....... it was  different  then .....i guess .........but i feel sorry for todays   parents ......  there  is so much shit  happening ......... they cannot  even leave their  kids  for  5 mins  ....... but they  get lifted  .......   sign of the  times!!!!!!.........glad i never  had  any  .......

Hoppers' is a box office hit. Parents are debating if it's too dark.

Some families think the latest Disney-Pixar release is cute.

Kate Murphy, Reporter
6 min read
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A scene from the new animated film Hoppers, released in theaters on March 6.
(Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures/Everett Collection)

It was a very good weekend for Hoppers, the latest animated offering from Disney-Pixar. The film claimed the No. 1 box office spot, raking in $88 million globally and $46 million domestically. Over on Rotten Tomatoes, it’s got a 92% approval rating from critics. Yahoo’s own Brett Arnold hailed it as “easily the best Disney movie in quite some time.” My 5-year-old liked it. So why are so many parents issuing warnings about how “terrible” and “scary” it is?

The film is rated PG, which means viewers of all ages are admitted but parental guidance is suggested for children. But in the days since its March 6 release, posts from parents decrying the film as too dark for kids have popped up all over social media. Is it really that terrifying? Are kids “sobbing loudly” in theaters? Will parents be treating their little ones to a fun movie night, or fueling nightmares?

Here’s what to know. Spoilers ahead!

What is the film about?

Hoppers follows Mabel Tanaka (voiced by Piper Curda), an animal-loving college student who wants to save a beloved forest glade from being destroyed by a new highway that Mayor Jerry Generazzo (a delightfully smarmy Jon Hamm) wants to build through it. She’s in luck: Mabel’s professor has created an experimental technology that allows humans to transfer their consciousness to robotic animals. Mabel recklessly uses the technology to “hop” into a robotic beaver in an effort to go undercover, communicate with real-life beavers and convince them to protect their habitat and save the glade.

Things spin out of control when other species get involved and decide humans must be stopped for good, kicking off an insane showdown — and two scenes that critics are singling out.

The ‘squish’ scene

Insect Queen in Hoppers looks at the camera.
Insect Queen (Meryl Streep) in Hoppers.
(Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures/Everett Collection)

One of the film’s most jarring scenes — many adults I spoke to said they gasped — occurs when the animals debate how to take revenge on humans for destroying their habitat. Insect Queen, a butterfly voiced by Meryl Streep, suggests a radical plan to “squish” the humans, just like they do bugs. It escalates into the animals all chanting “Squish!”

With Insect Queen flying in her face, Mabel reacts with a big accidental squish — killing the queen and shocking everyone (the other creatures, theatergoers) watching. Mabel then sheepishly rubs her beaver paws on the rock face behind her to get rid of the queen’s icky remains, which got a big laugh of disbelief from me and others in the audience.

Mayor Jerry does robot body horror

The demise of Insect Queen sets the stage for her bratty son, Titus, to become the main antagonist. Later in the movie, Titus (voiced by Dave Franco at his most unhinged) inhabits a human robot version of Mayor Jerry. During a confrontation, the robot moves on all four limbs in some sort of Pixar version of body horror. The animals manage to rip off his fake human mask, revealing a mechanical robot head underneath.

At this point, I looked over at my daughter to see if she was OK. Thankfully, she was, but I was ready to bolt out of the theater. So far, there have been no reports of nightmares. Honestly, she was more startled by the early scene where Ellen Bear (Melissa Villaseñor) jumps into the pond to consume Loaf, the laid-back beaver (Eduardo Franco). (Don’t worry — he survives.)

According to an interview director Daniel Chong gave CinemaBlend, it could have been way worse. Chong revealed that an earlier version of the movie — in which Dave Franco’s Titus screams in pain as his human mask is ripped off — had to be toned down after being deemed too scary during test screenings. Instead, Chong said he had Franco talk through the face mask being ripped off. And yet…

Some parents aren’t happy

Parents aren’t a monolith, so reactions are subjective and depend on a child’s age, temperament and tolerance to dicier fare. For the record, Common Sense Media, which provides independent, unbiased reviews from parents and kids, recommends the movie for kids ages 7 and up and doesn’t consider the “squish” moment or robot scene a huge red flag. Its review did caution that “a few scenes may frighten younger viewers.”

Over on social media, that may be an understatement. “My almost 8yo, who loves K-Pop Demon Hunters and has seen other things with fighting & mild violence was sobbing loudly in the theatre at one point 😭” one mom wrote in a March 8 Facebook post. “I would recommend it for older kids and/or pre-view it first if you may be concerned. Especially if you and your babies are animal lovers.”

Right-wing podcaster Alex Clark slammed the film as not “biblical” in an X post that’s gotten more than 5 million views. “Parents shouldn’t take kids under 10 to see this movie,” Clark warned, calling Hoppers “the darkest Pixar film with heavy themes.”





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