In the world of social networking and instant messaging, nothing remains private for long. Sexual Content: A girl is shown showering—her shoulders are seen. Characters wear low cut tops and suggestive clothing. One girl prides herself on her nickname, which refers to her breast size. Frequent discussions about sexual activity and positions are included in the script.
A teen couple makes crude sounds while pretending to have sex. A teen boy attempts to forcefully kiss a girl. A teen homosexual character talks about being bullied.
Later he is shown cuddling with a partner. A teacher confesses to inappropriate sexual activities with a student. A teen girl receives a sex toy as a present. A teacher gives condoms to a student. Language: Numerous frank terms for sexual activity and crude names for body parts are used in addition to a couple of strong, slang terms for sex. Dozens of scatological slang terms and profanities are also included along with terms of Deity, some slurs and crude names for women.
Teens pretend to be drunk at a party. Brief references are made to illegal drug use by teens and adults. Other: A character repeatedly lies. Students make comments about being bullied. A teacher screams at and threatens a student.
Negative depictions of religious characters are included. Gossip is spread about a character. Read my mind 1. Adult Written by cami August 14, Adult Written by dvdgirl June 22, Adult Written by Fluttershy12 October 11, Parent of a 6, 12, and year-old Written by Hailey Spring March 2, Love a Good Teen Movie!
You never SEE people having sex, we neve actually find out if our protagonist has it at all, in fact. Adult Written by JoshuaL December 16, Crude movie is not for kids.
This is one of the best movies I have ever seen. However I would not let a kid under age 13 watch it. It has crude sexual humor, and a lot of sexual references. It has sexual moaning not occurring during an actual intercourse, and it revolves around lies about sex. Adult Written by liazo10 July 3, Adult Written by FlanneryO January 23, Skip for School I'm writing this review for teachers, but parents may want to read too.
Honestly, this movie was funny and thoughtful. Olive's character is moral and provides a fine insight into how a teenage girl thinks and lives in this decade. I don't think parents should be too concerned about letting their kids watch this, especially with friends. It seems like a great sleepover party movie. However, I will not be showing this in my class public school, 11th grade because of the fact that we are in mixed company.
If it was a classroom of all girls it would be a different story, but this movie is just too sexy for school. I honestly wouldn't want my administrator walking in while Emma Stone is strutting around in full burlesque. Skip for the classroom, even when paired with Scarlet Letter.
This title contains: Positive role models. This movie is amazing and is put together perfectly! Not a family movie but more like a teen movie. A great message of you are who you are and Olive is somehow a great role model. Lots of sexual content and strong language and some drinking. You will love it! Adult Written by RoxyB. June 19, Great But Not For All! As an adult who grew up watching John Hughes teen movies, I love this movie.
It is smart, funny and engaging. Emma Stone is charming. Stanley Tucci and Patricia Clarkson are the best. As a parent of a 13 year old boy, however, I agree with other reviewers, this is NOT for tweens and teens under maybe? Adult Written by siriuspadfoot06 March 19, Love it! I love this movie! I think that it is extremely raw and vulnerable.
It's hilarious though-out the entire movie, and I feel as though it gives teenagers a look into the effects of living a provocative lifestyle. I rated this for 12 year old because, let's face it, that's when the majority of kids start fooling around. This movie gives them a look into the life of a girl who's life shatters due to the simple lie of having lost her virginity.
She uses humor to deflect cruelty and has a soft heart. She does bend the truth, sometimes to her detriment -- and she also takes the iffy step of demanding payment in the form of gift cards for helping guys with their reputations -- but in the end she finds that honesty really is the best policy.
Her parents are both irreverent and supportive, and a young man accepts her for who she is rather than who she's reputed to be. A teen slaps a peer; another gets into a fight, though viewers don't see the actual skirmish -- just him nursing a bleeding nose.
A guy gets pushy trying to kiss a girl. Though viewers don't actually see anyone having sex, the characters talk about it a lot , and the subject permeates the whole movie. Virginity and the loss thereof is a frequent topic of discussion. High schoolers gossip about a classmate's sex life. A girl and a boy fake having sex behind closed doors by making very loud grunting sounds and talking "dirty" to each other.
A main character wears suggestive clothing to confront her "easy" reputation. A teacher talks about having sex with a student who's of age. A quick glimpse of the side of a breast the woman's a nudist. There's a vibrator in the movie, though it's not seen wrapped in paper. Mention of a sexually transmitted disease. Language includes several uses of "s--t," plus "ass," "hell," "damn," "screw," "tw-t," "skank," "d--k," "t-t," and "whore. A bong is shown briefly. A teen asks another if he can fetch her a drink at a party though viewers don't see them imbibing.
It centers on a straight-laced teen Emma Stone who gets caught up in the school rumor mill partly thanks to gossip spreading via Facebook and texting -- a situation that many teens will be able to identify with.
Labeled promiscuous after she tells a white lie and, later, exacerbates that lie with another, she quickly loses control of the situation though, because this is a movie, she manages to cope with poise and wit.
There's also some swearing including "s--t" and allusions to underage drinking. Add your rating See all 31 parent reviews. Add your rating See all kid reviews.
In EASY A, without even thinking through the consequences, Olive Penderghast Emma Stone tells a white lie about going on a date with a college boy, which quickly morphs into a traction-gaining rumor that she's lost her virginity, and how. The campus crusaders don't like it, and neither does Olive, actually, until she realizes that she's no longer the bookish, invisible high achiever everyone has known her to be. Pretty soon, she's helping other boys who want to change their reputations through gossip and accepting gift cards as payment for her services But when the situation snowballs, her lie looks poised to undo a marriage, a career, and an important friendship.
It may even nix the possibility of finally kissing the boy Penn Badgley she's liked for years. Let's get the most important point out of the way: Emma Stone is a find! Sassy, funny, and thoroughly likeable, she makes Easy A an easy sell. Her Olive commits none of the sins that so frequently undo other teen heroines.
She's unpredictable, irreverent, believably impulsive, kind-hearted, and defiant at just the right moments. She elevates the film from typical teen fare to something nearly approaching the John Hughes classics that her character adores.
What keeps it from getting all the way there? The usual vilifying of nerds and popular types and religious zealots who, it has to be said, come across as painfully judgey here. In real life, there are other judgey types, so it's lazy shorthand to pin the heavy-handed self-righteousness on Christians. And though Patricia Clarkson and Stanley Tucci are adorable as Olive's parents, you can't help but wonder whether every well-adjusted parent in a teen comedy has to be portrayed as a wise-cracking, quip-dispensing bon vivant.
See: Juno. Olive's big love is a snooze, too the character, not the actor -- sorry, Penn Badgley. A girl as interesting as Olive deserves a Ferris Bueller as a counterpart. But, these quibbles aside, Easy A is still great fun. Who knew Hawthorne could be this hilarious?
Families can talk about gossip and bullying. What role does technology play in how the gossip about Olive spreads in Easy A? How can you prevent that kind of thing from happening in real life?
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