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1%%ATTENTION EDITORS: Due to overflow, please place examples both in the correct folder and in alphabetical order.
2%%Unusual examples (those that cover full series, creators, in-universe examples, genres, etc.) belong in the misc folder.
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5Due to many superhero-related films falling under this trope, [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids.SuperheroFilms they have their own page]].
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10* In his book ''The Best Old Movies for Families'', critic Ty Burr complains that many other PG-13 rated films are regarded as family fare thanks to intentional MisaimedMarketing, which means parents will happily take toddlers to films like ''Film/VanHelsing'' without a second thought.
11* Canada has the PG rating for most provinces, and although most films released with the rating are generally okay for older kids (nearly every Marvel movie gets it, as does every ''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean'' movie), some cause [[ValuesDissonance confusion for American viewers due to different ratings standards]] (who will notice the PG logo on the back of most DVD covers). [[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120669/parentalguide According to IMDB]] ''Film/FearAndLoathingInLasVegas'', of all films, was rated PG in Canada.
12** It's not uncommon to see Canadian 14A and PG video ratings applied to films that would have received R ratings in the US. Sexual content and violence needs to be pretty extreme to trigger the 18A rating these days.
13* Parents, just because a film is a musical doesn't mean that it's kid-friendly. ''Film/RepoTheGeneticOpera'', ''Film/{{Chicago}}'', ''Film/MoulinRouge'', ''Film/TheRockyHorrorPictureShow'', ''WesternAnimation/SouthParkBiggerLongerAndUncut'', ''Film/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet'', ''Film/TheBestLittleWhorehouseInTexas'' and ''Theatre/LesMiserables'' come to mind. Musicals, yes they are. Kid friendly, far from it:
14** Granted, for ''Sweeney Todd'', some parents may remember the much less gory [[Theatre/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet stage version]]. Most performances keep the child molestation, rape, suicide and cannibalism puns--while they aren't graphically shown, it can still be unsettling to hear it described.
15** Almost all adaptations of ''Literature/LesMiserables''. Parents should notice the story includes prostitution, extreme poverty, massacres, kids killed off, teens killed off, suicide, and other not-for-children things.
16** ''Film/{{Chicago}}'' is no less troublesome for those seeking family-friendly entertainment. After all, it takes place in Prohibition-era Chicago, home of gangsters, flappers, illegal booze, and murder. Several numbers take place in a murderer's prison, and there's cursing in some of the lyrics. This doesn't deter some middle schools from performing it.
17** There are many little kids who are fans of ''Rocky Horror'', but there is a ton of sex and several scary scenes, including two scenes involving [[spoiler:four deaths]], but it's not as bad as most R rated movies nowadays. Its sequel, ''Shock Treatment'', although it is rated PG, contains more cursing and suggestive language than in ''Rocky Horror''.
18** Speaking of musicals, take the 2000 adaptation of ''Theatre/LovesLaboursLost''. It may be a silly 1930's-esque musical about 3 men and a king trying to not be with women, but the rule of "No Women" is soon broken, and due to this, some sexual jokes are in the movie, including one sexy musical number with people in masks. Plus, the ending has [[spoiler:very disturbing images of World War 2, including burning buildings and concentration camps.]] Despite this, it got a PG rating in America and a U rating in the UK.
19** ''Film/TheProducers''. Yeah, the protagonists have also voiced [[WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994 Timon and Simba]],[[note]]Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick play Bialystock and Bloom respectively[[/note]] and it's a wacky musical that also co-stars Creator/WillFerrell. Hell, it's even rated PG-13 in most countries, and was even "suitable for all ages" in Iceland, Norway, Malaysia, and Finland. Did we mention it contains innumerable amounts of sexual innuendos, several [[LastSecondWordSwap implied]] f-bombs, plenty of bad language, [[ThoseWackyNazis Nazi and WWII humor]], and [[QueerAsTropes almost every gay stereotype under the sun]].
20** ''Film/LittleShopOfHorrors'' is a bunch of fun! Your kids will love the songs, and in the end Seymour and Audrey have a happy ending, right? They're sure to love the DepravedDentist, the protagonist chopping a dead man up and feeding him to a laughing plant, watching a man get chomped and swallowed whole by a plant and the female lead almost getting swallowed herself! And that's the lighter and happier ending, as opposed to the stage version, wherein everybody dies.
21** One of the most egregious examples would be Creator/AnthonyNewley's semi-autobiographical ([[OverlyLongTitle and very-long-named]]) movie-musical ''Can Heironymus Merkin Ever Forget Mercy Humppe and Find True Happiness?'' Newley being famous for the songs from ''Film/WillyWonkaAndTheChocolateFactory'' and for playing Matthew Mugg in ''Film/DoctorDolittle'', one might think ''Heironymus Merkin'' is family-friendly... until they find out not only is it '''Rated X''', but was apparently sleazy enough that his son, Sacha Newley, accused him of [[PedoHunt being a pedophile]] years after his death. (Although thankfully this is probably not true, since Newley's ex-wife Creator/JoanCollins, who actually divorced him over the film, did defend him from those allegations, as did Newley's daughter Tara.)
22* A lot of old classic cinema films get mistaken for this perhaps unintentionally to introduce children to the most popular cinema that existed from an early age. A lot of people just can't seem to understand that while MediaNotes/TheHaysCode made films more "wholesome," it did not always make them more soothing for kids. Indeed, the Code was less stringent with horror films than with any other genre. The aforementioned ''Best Old Movies for Families'' book directly addresses this, and except for ''Film/HelloDolly'', the films below are described in detail so parents know what they're ''really'' about going in so they'll know if they want their kids to tackle it now or later.
23** ''Film/ItsAWonderfulLife'', as inspirational as it is as a holiday film, still has a man trying to kill himself.
24** ''Theatre/WestSideStory'', featuring a good ol' gang stabbin', attempted gang rape, and the blatant racism of the cops and the Jets.
25** ''Film/HelloDolly'': The fact that it got a G-rating in America makes this example even worse.
26** ''Film/KingKong1933''. The effects might have aged, but the dinosaurs and giant ape are still scary as hell.
27** ''Film/TheRedShoes1948''. It's based on a fairy tale! And ballet! High culture! Never mind the ballet-within-a-film is avant-garde expressionist horror where (just like the story) the heroine dances herself to death in the red shoes, and that's before the real-world framing story ends [[spoiler: with the heroine, torn between her love for her husband and her love for ballet, who commits suicide by leaping off a balcony [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill in front of a train]]]].
28** Granted, people almost never claim it's a film for children. But a good number of fans of classic comedy and/or Creator/MarilynMonroe seem to like her famous film ''Film/TheSevenYearItch'' because it's supposedly "innocent" and "charming" - not crude like romantic comedies are today. [[PraisingShowsYouDontWatch You have to wonder if such people have actually watched the movie.]] Never mind [[MarilynManeuver the skirt scene]]: ''The Seven Year Itch'' features jokes and innuendos about adultery, [[BlackComedyRape rape]], murder, [[SuicideAsComedy suicide]], [[DoubleStandardAbuseFemaleOnMale spousal abuse]], lung cancer, and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking senseless book-burning]] - and all of this in the mid-1950s, no less! ''The Seven Year Itch'' isn't innocent; it's ''seemingly'' innocent, which arguably makes it even edgier than the modern comedies to which it's compared.
29* ''Film/{{Hairspray|1988}}'' (and its 2007 remake) is somewhat family friendly with its pro-acceptance message, which has led people to pick up other Creator/JohnWaters films thinking they were similar. This has led to Waters getting massive amounts of hate mail despite his reputation as "The Sultan of Sleaze." In one case, a woman made the news when she [[DisproportionateRetribution called 911]] after putting on ''Film/PinkFlamingos'' for her kids.
30* "Family" geared channels such as Showtime Fam Zone and Starz Kids tend to show anything under the R rating even if they're not really family friendly. Thus we get more risque PG and PG-13 movies like ''Film/LookWhosTalking'' or ''Film/ThreeMenAndABaby'' alongside more "kid-friendly" material.
31* There have been numerous examples of family-friendly TV series being adapted as raunchier and/or more violent PG-13 and R-rated films. Recent examples include ''Film/TheATeam'', ''Film/CHiPs'', ''Film/{{Baywatch}}'' (the original series might have featured sexy actors in swimwear, but it was still considered a family show), and ''definitely'' the movies based upon ''Series/TheDukesOfHazzard'' which even led original TV cast members to complain. In December 2017, it was announced that Creator/QuentinTarantino was planning to direct an R-rated ''Franchise/StarTrek'' film, so that may be added to the list in the future.
32* Due to their educational nature, documentaries don't follow the same ratings criteria as fictional films. A documentary can be given a "TV-14" rating despite featuring graphic photos and footage of dead bodies. This is especially common in war documentaries or [[NatureIsNotNice nature]] documentaries. Similarly, it leads to nudity and sexual situations in "PG" or "TV-PG" documentaries (hence the NationalGeographicNudity trope).
33* This trope is the main reason why Creator/RobertRodriguez made ''Film/SpyKids'' because he wanted to make a family oriented film after in an interview where he states that a guy told him his 6 year old son loved ''Film/{{Desperado}}'' despite the R rating which led to Robert explaining he never intended for kids to watch it so later he ended up making the [[Film/SpyKids the first film of the series that is a family spy movie]] released in 2001 and thus the rest is history.
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37* ''Series/TheATeam'', for all its cartoony violence, was pitched at a family audience. The same cannot be said of the [[Film/TheATeam big-screen]] remake which was PG-13 rated and full of people actually getting killed.
38* ''Film/TheABCsOfDeath'': Oh look, a film with a cute cover of a baby [[NightmareFuelStationAttendant reading a book in what appears to be a cool chair]], containing 26 shorts ranging from ''WesternAnimation/WallaceAndGromit''-style claymation to a live-action short featuring cute Japanese schoolgirls! The title should give you a pretty clear clue that it's not for kids, but some people go and show it to their kids anyways.
39* While it doesn't usually fall under this trope, ''Film/AClockworkOrange'' was placed under this trope by Regis Philbin, who was babysitting Kelly Ripa's children on air. [[SarcasmMode Wholesome family entertainment!]] Look, Regis: the fact that a film shows British people in funny hats does not make it ''Film/MaryPoppins''.
40* ''Film/{{Alfie}}'', which brought Michael Caine into popularity, is rated PG in the US but ''it is NOT for kids.'' It's about a playboy who can't stop having casual sexual relations with women, and who slowly finds emptiness through this pattern. He has extremely sexist attitudes and frequently refers to his many partners as "it"--hardly something children should be watching. It also deals with very mature themes like abortion, emptiness in relations and mental and physical consequences.[[note]] The irony is that it was released in 1966, and the subject matter initially warranted a "mature audiences" advisory. However, in 1972 it was re-rated at PG. Most countries have given it their equivalent of an R rating, though the US still retains the old PG rating.[[/note]]
41* ''Film/{{Airplane}}'' is rated PG despite containing multiple suicides, a character sniffing glue, the [[DeadBabyComedy death of a child played for laughs]], and some nudity. It was released in 1980, predating the PG-13 rating. Newer releases of the film have bumped the film up to PG-13. In the UK, the movie is rated 15. Also qualifies as a case of ValuesDissonance, as a lot of the dubious content that was acceptable at PG in 1980 would be more at home at PG-13 (or R, depending on the MPAA's mood) in this day and age.
42* A LampshadeHanging on this trope is hung in the opening of ''Film/{{Alice|1988}}'', the infamous Czechoslovakian adaptation of ''Literature/AliceInWonderland'': "You are about to see a film. Made for children. ''Perhaps.''"
43* In the late 90's and early 2000's, there were [[https://nypost.com/2001/08/10/sleazy-as-pie-in-its-own-vulgar-way-this-sequel-is-a-side-splitter/ reports of children as young as 9 either buying tickets or going with their parents]] to see the ''Film/AmericanPie'' films because they believed they were funny comedies about teenagers doing crazy things. The entire series is built around sexual actions and jokes, getting its title from a scene in the first film in which a character masturbates into a pie.
44* ''Atari: Game Over'' is a documentary about the Platform/{{Atari 2600}}, Atari in general, and mainly the very infamous E.T. game. It's aimed at adult gamers, especially those who were youths in The80s; however, it is regularly aired on Showtime's family geared channel. Despite it being about video games it's TV-14 and contains heavy references to drugs.
45* The ''Film/AustinPowers'' films:
46** Despite being filled to the brim with sexual innuendo and whose second film has the word ''shag'' (British slang term meaning "to have sex with") right in the title, seems to suffer from this greatly. Not only that, the third movie actually won an award for Favorite Movie at the 2003 Kids' Choice Awards.
47** ''TIME'' reviewer Richard Corliss used ''Austin Powers'' as a starting point on an [[https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,1002940,00.html essay about the PG-13 rating]]. He even states at a certain point: "parents strongly cautioned means kids desperately wanted."
48* James Cameron's ''Film/{{Avatar}}'' is PG-13 rated and by no means for kids, but due to [[MisaimedMarketing the McDonald's Happy Meal promotion and other toys being made]], parents still took their kids to go see it... Because the Na'vi are just like [[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitch Stitch]]! In response, James Cameron made a censored audio track for the DVD releases. It doesn't help that there is a themed area in Disney's Animal Kingdom, either.
49* ''Film/BackToSchool'' looks like a funny family comedy about an old man (played by Creator/RodneyDangerfield) who goes back to college. It isn't rated PG-13 for nothing.
50* Apparently, an R rating wasn't enough for some parents to understand that the Creator/BillyBobThornton comedy ''Film/BadSanta'' was not for kids. Hey, it's about SantaClaus, so it's for kids, right? So review quotes were added to the TV ads that prominently displayed the words, "ADULTS ONLY". In Ireland, it was responsible for the IFCO creating a new 16s rating in 2005, as there was only 15PG and 18 for R-rated films up to that point and the head censor felt that the gap between those two ratings was too wide.
51* ''Film/TheBadNewsBears'' also falls under this. Just because it's about a ragtag kids sports team doesn't mean it's another ''Film/LittleGiants''. It includes an alchoholic main character, there's a child (Tanner) who spews swears and racial slurs like they are going out of style (and he was probably the most popular character in the film), there are references to the female team members' breast development (although not in any sexual context), and the coach gives his elementary/middle school players beer to celebrate their second place finish.
52* When ''Film/TheBananaSplitsMovie'' was released to DVD, Amazon categorized it as a Kids and Family film because it was based on a children's show. Not only is it a horror movie based on the show, but it contains many gruesome deaths, along with a few instances of mild swearing and a scene in which a character goes onstage while drunk.
53* ''Film/Barbie2023'' may be based on a child-friendly franchise, but it's PG-13 and contains many innuendos, adult themes and a plot where the main character [[spoiler: goes through a depression]]. Despite this, some parents took their daughters to see it anyway. It should definitely be noted that the film was advertised before family-friendly movies such as ''WesternAnimation/TheSuperMarioBrosMovie''.
54* ''Film/{{Beetlejuice}}''
55** When you consider that it deals with death, suicide, rather [[RuleOfFunny gruesome yet hilarious depictions of how people look after they die]], and [[{{Squick}} a ghost trying to marry a 14-year-old girl]], this film, despite having a PG rating in the United States, is definitely not a kids' film.
56** In the UK, ''Film/{{Beetlejuice}}'' has a "15" rating for that very reason. The film has since been re-rated 12A.
57** In some cuts of the movie, Beetlejuice has a PrecisionFStrike... accompanied by grabbing his groin.
58--->'''Beetlejuice:''' Hey, buddy! Nice fuckin' model! ''[crotch-grab, accompanied by "honk-honk"]''
59* Hey, ''Film/BlackSwan''! It's an Oscar-winning movie about Creator/NataliePortman as a ballerina, complete with great visuals! [[NightmareFuel What]] [[{{Fingore}} could]] [[SanitySlippage POSSIBLY]] [[BodyHorror go]] [[ParanoiaFuel wrong]]?
60* Some may understandably believe that Richard Linklater's ''Film/{{Boyhood}}'' is a film for kids. It's about a boy who grows to become a teenager! It isn't, though. It features a lot of swearing, sex references, drug use and more, so it's certainly not for kids. Rated R for a reason.
61* ''Film/TheBreakfastClub'' sounds like a fun movie about the misadventures of teens in high school, but it actually contains drug and sexual references and tons of swearing. It doesn't help that the film was spoofed by many kids' shows, so parents may be misled into thinking it's a kids' film, especially since the film is rated R.
62* Some parents took their kids to see ''Film/BrokebackMountain'' just because it was about cowboys. However, the movie revolves around a gay relationship, has multiple sex scenes, and in the end, [[spoiler: one of the main characters is beaten to death]]. Even worse, Common Sense Media gives this film as a recommendation to tamer movies for teens like ''Film/{{Titanic|1997}}'' and ''Film/CallMeByYourName'', even going as far to [[https://www.commonsensemedia.org/lists/lgbtq-movies-for-teens put it on a list of the best LGBTQ movies to watch with people that age.]] (CSM currently rates it as 17+, for mature teens only.)
63* ''Film/BruceAlmighty'' got a lot of flack from parents who ignored the PG-13/12 rating and took their kids to see it, because of all the swearing (plenty of "shits" and one "fuck") and sexual content (Bruce blows up a girl's skirt, makes his girlfriend have spontaneous orgasms, and makes her boobs bigger). Apparently because it's a movie about God it should be child-friendly.
64* Meet ''Film/{{Chappie}}'', a self-aware, peace-loving robot who just wants to live and be left alone and his scientist friend who's helping him evade the authorities who want to capture him... sounds like the typical family film plot, right? Actually, the movie is rated R for "violence, language and brief nudity." Heaven help any families who mistakenly show it to their kids.
65* ''Film/ChildsPlay'' is a movie about a six-year-old and his doll, which comes to life. Nothing could be more innocent, right? WRONG!
66* ''Film/{{Cloverfield}}'' may look like another ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}'', but it isn't for kids, unless they like blood-sucking parasites [[spoiler:whose bite [[LudicrousGibs eventually causes the victim to explode]]]], subplots about unfaithfulness, wreckage evocative of 9/11, a woman impaled on a metal spike, the monster eating [[spoiler:Hud the cameraman]], and [[spoiler:all of New York being bombed, with no survivors.]]
67* ''Film/CoolWorld''. And that's ''after'' they changed it from an erotic horror about a half-human, half-cartoon girl becoming a RoaringRampageOfRevenge when she discovers who her real father is (a comic book artist who had sex with one of his drawn creations) to a ''Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit'' knock-off. Hell, Creator/RalphBakshi's filmography in general...
68* ''Film/CowboysAndAliens'' might look like a cool movie crossing over two things that kids love: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin aliens and cowboys]]. Even the ad services utilized for Website/ThisVeryWiki seemed to have the same thoughts, with the ads on the movie's page being for things like ''[[VideoGame/SpongeBobSquarePantsBattleForBikiniBottom SpongeBob SquarePants Battle For Bikini Bottom Rehydrated]]'' and ''[[Series/SesameStreet Sesame Street Live!]]''. [[note]] Usually ads are determined by the content of the page, but unlike most instances where this happened, these usually turned up on the page even if the user didn't search for something related to them.[[/note]] However, this isn't the case. Besides having bucketloads of violence, there's drunk characters, a few swears, [[GRatedDrug tea being used as a hallucinogen]] and even a mention of prostitution, among other things.
69* ''Film/DeathToSmoochy''. Creator/RobinWilliams and [[KidsShowMascotParody a cute Barney-like character]] must mean it's for kids, right? Never mind the fact it has 'death' right in the title, the R rating, and that some posters showed the Barney-{{Expy}} in a ''body bag''.
70* Even though [[Creator/{{Disney}} Disney]] made ''Film/TheDevilAndMaxDevlin'' and it received a PG rating (before the creation of the PG-13 rating), the movie still isn't for kids because it revolves around a man who gets hit by a car and makes a deal with the devil to take three people's souls to avoid spending eternity in hell. This reason caused the movie to [[BoxOfficeBomb fail at the box office]]. Since Disney made it, parents assumed it was for kids and sent angry letters to Disney about the film's content, damaging its reputation and causing it to flop. Indeed, this movie is one of the reasons Disney created [[Creator/{{Touchstone Pictures}} Touchstone Pictures]]. The blurb on the 2006 DVD for the film, claiming it is something "the whole family will enjoy," also doesn't help.
71* ''Film/DropDeadFred'' seems to be harmless, a movie about a woman reunited with her imaginary friend from childhood. Many people remember watching this as kids. However, looking past the goofiness present throughout the film, it's pretty much the story of a woman about to lose her mind thanks in part to a crapsack childhood, dominated by an emotionally abusive mother. Also, there's a lot of blatant adult (PG-13) humor, including sex jokes, and the mother is nicknamed "Mega-bitch" by the title character.
72* Creator/DavidLynch's ''Film/Dune1984'' had a tie-in ''coloring book''. That's right, the film with the vagina-mouthed monsters and the scene where the pustule-faced man uncorks his sex-slave's heart valve so he bleeds to death as he fondles him. Other merchandise included [[http://www.mindspring.com/~dunestuff/merch.html#Kids a pop-up book, bubble-gum trading cards, ViewMaster reels, and hey kids, comics]]! (This was one of the first films to receive a PG-13, as it was released at the tail end of 1984 -- otherwise, it ''might'' have gone out with a PG, as the ''Franchise/IndianaJones'' films had up to that point.)
73* ''Film/EuroTrip'': Just because it has a green fairy and it is made from the writers of ''Film/TheCatInTheHat'' doesn't mean it's for kids. Its humor is more raunchy and direct than the Dr. Seuss adaptation.
74* Tarsem Singh's ''Film/TheFall'' is often compared with ''Film/ThePrincessBride''. It's true that both are celebrations of storytelling and fantasy epics... but only one of them has a suicidally-depressed storyteller manipulating a child far too young to understand, or the story-within-a-story ending with the gruesome deaths of the adventurers.
75* ''Film/ForrestGump'':
76** The early scene where young Forrest overhears his mother sleeping with the principal of his school to guarantee him admission (although that scene tends to leave most kids confused than frightened).
77** Jenny's ''entire life'': [[AbusiveParents An alcoholic father, who is implied to be sexually abusive]], drugs, groping by an audience member during a nude stage performance, [[DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment drugs]], stint as a Playboy centerfold, drugs, physically abusive boyfriend, drugs, contemplation of suicide, drugs, and eventual untimely death (originally thought to be AIDS, but Word of God is it was Hepatitis C). [[OverlyLongGag And drugs.]]
78** The gore of the Vietnam scenes. A soldier gets his legs blown off, for one.
79** Lieutenant Dan's raving depression. Even when Dan gets better, there's a scene that can result in the creeps. When the lieutenant finally lets go of his anger on the shrimping boat and thanks Forrest for saving his life, he dives backward over the side of the boat and goes for a swim toward the horizon. As Forrest's accompanying narration makes it clear that the lieutenant is at peace now, and the way the shot is framed, make it look as if Dan is about to drown himself (the relieved grin on his face reminds more of the StepfordSmiler than anything else).
80** The use of various racist and ableist slurs.
81** The many references to high-profile assassinations.
82** The fact that it looks at American history in a distinctly cynical and satirical, if ultimately optimistic, light - not that there's anything wrong with that, but ''Mr. Smith Goes to Washington'' it ain't.
83** All in all, even [[{{Bowdlerise}} censored for TV]], not easily accessible or indeed appropriate for little kids. This seems to have stuck in many people's minds as the wholesome, patriotic tale of a mentally-challenged man with a heart of gold who inadvertently becomes part of American culture (including teaching Elvis Presley how to dance, fighting in the Vietnam War, and meeting John F. Kennedy), which has led to its being shown on family-movie channels at around eight p.m. All of the serious stuff is overlooked.
84* Don't be fooled by the fact ''Film/FunSize'' is made by Creator/{{Nickelodeon}}, is marketed by Airheads candy and stars Music/VictoriaJustice; it's not rated PG-13 for nothing. It's doused with a lot of inappropriate humor and some profanity (including a scene where a character drops the S-bomb ''three times'' in just a minute). In Australia, it had to be {{Bowdlerise}}d to escape the M rating (equivalent of PG-13) and thereby earn a PG. The [[AudienceAlienatingPremise edginess of the film despite being marketed by Nickelodeon]] is probably why it became a BoxOfficeBomb.
85* At first, ''Film/TheFisherKing'' looks like the type of Creator/RobinWilliams comedy that might be targeted at families. But it has outbursts of profanity, some FamilyUnfriendlyViolence, and subplots involving suicide and a mad gunman.
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89* Some parents took their children to see ''Film/GetHard'', resulting in some toddlers leaving the theater frightened. Hey, a funny prison comedy with many comedians kids are familiar with! Family-friendly, right? No! It's rated R, and features some crude sexual humor and violence.
90* ''Film/{{Ghostbusters|1984}}'': Most people think of the original film as a family movie, and why shouldn't they? The theme song is almost always played during kid-friendly Halloween parties, there was plenty of merchandise targeted towards children, it spawned [[WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters a popular cartoon]], it's been shown on the Disney Channel several times, and even been released on home video as part of Creator/{{Columbia|Pictures}}/Creator/{{TriStar|Pictures}}'s family collection. But the truth is, the film was meant for adults. There are sexual references and foul language throughout, particularly one brief scene during a montage featuring a ghost giving Ray a blow job. The original film is rated PG, which might be why people think of it as being for kids. However, if it were being released today, ''Ghostbusters'' would easily earn a PG-13 rating, which didn't exist at the time. Because the movie was such a hit with young children and also because of the cartoon's popularity, ''Film/{{Ghostbusters II}}'' was toned down considerably to be more family friendly.
91* The original 1954 version of ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}'', ''Film/Godzilla1954'' is an extremely dark allegory for the horrors of nuclear weapons. It depicts people vaporized, a woman holding her children assuring them "we will be with daddy soon," people suffering in hospitals with radiation sickness and burns, and a love triangle that ends in a suicide. You know, for kids!
92* ''Film/GoodBoys'' is an R-rated comedy starring a trio of 12-year old boys. A trailer even lampshades that the actors themselves aren't old enough to see the film they starred in when it comes to theatres.
93* ''Film/TheGoodSon'' starred adorable little Macaulay Culkin, known and loved by children at the time for his ''Film/HomeAlone'' series. But this particular R-rated film had him playing a serial killer who [[spoiler: fell to his death, while screaming rather like he did in ''Film/HomeAlone'']]. [[NightmareFuel/TheGoodSon Sweet dreams, kiddos!]]
94* ''{{Film/Gremlins|1984}}'': Along with ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheTempleOfDoom'' leads for the creation of both the PG-13 rating in the USA and the "12" rating in the UK, [[FamilyUnfriendlyDeath because a Gremlin is exploded in the microwave]], and the story is very suited to NightmareFuel. According to ''Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine'', little children moviegoers "screamed and cried" in the theater as the reason why many patrons and parents are walking out and demanding their money back by the story tone and violence themselves.
95* ''Film/TheHappytimeMurders'' may seem like a movie about a woman who makes friends with a puppet in order to save his friends, but just one look at the title and its tagline ("No Sesame. All Street."), and most people will know right away that it isn't a children's movie.
96* ''Franchise/HarryPotter'': Although the first three films are largely targeted towards kids and pre-teens, the rest of the series is noticeably more geared towards teenagers and young adults. Some of the violence gets particularly dark and gruesome towards the end of the series, with pretty realistic and unpleasant blood and injury detail visible in multiple scenes. An example of a particularly nasty scene can be found within The Deathly Hallows: Part 1, where Hermione has the word "mudblood" carved into her arm with a knife while she screams in agony (although most of it off-screen, it's still way too dark and scary for children). Other non-kid-friendly scenes include Albus Dumbledore being horribly tortured by a toxic cursed potion in ''The Half-Blood Prince'', a sizable chunk of Ron's shoulder and upper arm being torn off in ''The Deathly Hallows: Part 1'', Harry being tortured by Voldemort (and briefly stabbed by a knife) in ''The Goblet of Fire'', a brief but graphic shot of Voldemort's bloodstained corpse in ''The Deathly Hallows: Part 2'', and so on. [[note]] Admittedly, the films were becoming darker and more mature as the primary audience - the children who'd read the books as they came out - aged into adulthood, and the director changed from [[Creator/ChrisColumbus the guy responsible for the first two]] ''Film/HomeAlone'' [[Creator/ChrisColumbus films &]] ''Film/MrsDoubtfire'' to [[Creator/AlfonsoCuaron a more fantasy-oriented one]].[[/note]]
97* The poster for ''Film/{{Honey Boy}}'' depicts a grumpy pre-teen boy who has had a pie smashed in his face, making it look like a harmless kid-friendly slapstick. The film is actually an adult drama about alcoholism and child abuse, and therefore isn't at all for kids.
98* ''Film/HotToTrot'': It's a movie about a talking horse, it seems like it would be a fun family film, right? But there's a lot of excessive swearing (particularly "shit", as well as jarringly casual use of the f-slur) and explicitly sexual jokes for something aimed family audiences, even by the comparatively lax standards of the '80s.
99* ''Film/JackTheGiantSlayer'' is based on a fairy tale, so it must be okay for young children, right? Dead wrong. Discretion shots aside, there are some pretty brutal (and often highly original) on-screen deaths. Another PG-13.
100* ''Film/{{Jellyfish}}'' is promoted on Creator/{{Tubi}}'s "Family Movies" section, likely on the basis of it starring a child protagonist, heedless of the fact that said child is a [[SirSwearsALot foul-mouthed]] TroubledTeen who moonlights as an '''''[[HarmfulToMinors underage prostitute]]'''''.
101* The ''Franchise/IndianaJones'' series (yet another Spielberg effort!) is a victim to this. Nothing screams Family Friendly like melting Nazis, [[HelicopterBlender mooks chopped up by aircraft propellers]], and man-eating ants, right? In particular, controversy over the particularly high level of gore and horror in ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheTempleOfDoom'' (along with ''{{Film/Gremlins|1984}}'') strongly contributed to the creation of both the PG-13 rating in the USA and the "12" rating in the UK.
102* Some clueless parents took their kids to see ''Film/Joker2019'' because the title character is a Batman villain, unaware that the film is rated R and contains a notably violent and sadistic interpretation of the character. Alamo Drafthouse had to issue a [[https://ew.com/movies/2019/10/02/joker-parents-warning/ PSA]] to parents about not taking their kids to see it, as it is not kid friendly at all.
103* At least one Family Home Entertainment release, ''[[http://slasherindex.com/artworkpages/journey_into_the_beyond.html Journey into the Beyond]]'', has explicit blood and violence. Worth mentioning because the distributor is clearly ''Family Home Entertainment'', and not its adult-oriented sister companies U.S.A. Home Video (later International Video Entertainment, Live Home Video, and Artisan Home Video), Monterey Home Video, Thriller Video, Magnum Entertainment, Tenth Avenue Video, Wizard Video, or [[ExplicitContent Caballero Control Corporation Home Video]]. And just so parents get the message, it clearly states on the front that it's not for anyone under the age of 18.
104* ''Franchise/JurassicPark'' and its sequels. "This dinosaur movie is so cool, look there's a ''T. rex'' and... HE'S EATING PEOPLE! MOMMY! I'M SCAAAARREEED!" Nonetheless, given KidsLoveDinosaurs, it was still pretty heavily marketed towards them, with plenty of toys, coloring books, video games, etc. It was a funny sort of {{defictionalization}} of the Jurassic Park merchandise from the park.
105* ''Film/{{Keanu}}'' got this reaction from some people, mainly since the film's advertisements and posters makes it appear that the film is all about a group of gangsters trying to rescue a cute kitten. However, just because it features a CuteKitten doesn't mean it's appropriate for children. It's rated R for a reason.
106* The movie poster for ''Film/{{Kids}}'', with teens in bright four-color filters laughing, smiling, and otherwise posing in a way that suggested nothing more dangerous than any other movie for late preteens from TheNineties. NeverTrustATrailer, indeed. This was probably intentional - the movie really was for late preteens, because its moral falls distinctly into that group. And the MPAA was all set to give ''Kids'' an NC-17 rating, but Miramax (already part of Disney) decided to release the film unrated instead.
107* Some parents mistakenly thought ''Film/KingsmanTheSecretService'' was just another silly spy movie along the lines of ''Film/AgentCodyBanks''. There was also a [[PreciousPuppy cute little pug]] [[NeverTrustATrailer in the trailers]]. Cue shocks of horror when they hear all the {{Cluster F Bomb}}s and witness the Tarantino-level violence. Let's just hope they left right [[SignatureScene before the characters went to church...]] Again, folks, rated R for a reason.
108* ''Film/LoveActually'' seems like a nice little family Christmas movie that could be fun to take the kids to, and even gets frequently aired on ABC Family. But then there's the subplot with two stand-ins for a sex scene in a movie (complete with nudity) and an implied five-some with four American girls and one British guy. And the F-words. ''And'' several restrained but emotionally intense scenes about a superficially happily-married father of elementary-school aged children [[spoiler:whose wife finds he's having an affair with another woman]]. [[SarcasmMode Just the thing for Christmas with the kids!]] To make matters worse, it's rated "for all ages" in Spain and the Netherlands!
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112* ''Literature/MarleyAndMe'':
113** The [[NeverTrustATrailer trailers and ads were trying to present it as a family comedy about a dog and his mischievous antics]]. But really the movie was actually focused more on the (not-so-comedic) lives of the people and in the end [[spoiler: the dog [[DeathByNewberyMedal grows old and is put down]]]]. Of course, some people just will not listen. A grandmother was informed upwards of 4 times that this movie isn't for kids. She took three kids (aged eight, ten, and thirteen) to see it -- and came out very dissatisfied.
114** It is worth noting that there are [[http://www.amazon.com/Marley-Me-Meet-Read-Book/dp/0061704393/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1291522218&sr=1-3 easy reader books for kids.]]
115** The original book ran into the same problem. Author John Grogan eventually had to release a more kid-friendly version, eliminating the sexual content and moments of marital strife, even though [[spoiler:Marley's death remained part of the story.]]
116** It doesn't help that they later released a straight to video prequel called ''Marley & Me: The Puppy Years'' where Marley is an adorable talking puppy with adorable talking puppy friends. Any kid who sees that and decides they want to see the original is in for a hard lesson about how Hollywood works.
117* ''Film/MeanCreek'', despite the young cast, it's clearly not intended for a young audience in mind as is obvious by the R-rating, frequent profanity and in general family-unfriendly behavior. Despite all this, reports are that it managed to get shown in quite a few high school and even religion classes.
118* ''Film/MeetTheFeebles'' It's a puppet movie not dissimilar to ''The Muppets'', it must be for kids, right? Nope, it has a song sung about sodomy [[spoiler: during a shooting rampage]], among other things.
119* ''Film/MeMyselfAndIrene'': Creator/JimCarrey being goofy means it's for kids, right? After all, [[NeverTrustATrailer the trailer didn't show anything inappropriate or foul language]] so it doesn't matter that the movie is [[UsefulNotes/MediaClassifications rated R]]...
120* Hey, ''Film/AMillionWaysToDieInTheWest'' is a comedy about cowboys! All little boys love westerns, right? Well, if you weren't tipped off by the fact that it's made by the same team behind the aforementioned ''Ted'' (and stars Creator/SethMacFarlane, who, despite working on kids' cartoons, some of which had risqué content early in his career, has made bank with more adult-oriented animation, like ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' and ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad''), be prepared for the constant sex jokes, prostitutes, bodily fluids, [[GrossUpCloseUp sheep penis close-ups]], ToiletHumor galore, cartoonishly violent deaths, and drunkenness.
121* The Japanese 1957 classic film, ''Film/TheMilitaryPolicemanAndTheDismemberedBeauty'', whose graphic murder scene was definitely not for children, surely shouldn't fall into this trap. ''VideoGame/{{MOTHER}}'' series creator Creator/ShigesatoItoi, however, [[MisaimedFandom was some accidental exception]] for the scene that he saw as a little boy (as he thought he was seeing a rape scene at the time), and that scene, along with the actress in it, would later inspire the last battle scene with Giygas in ''VideoGame/EarthBound1994''.
122* ''Film/MouseHunt'' contains a cute little mouse and plays out like a live-action ''Tom and Jerry'' cartoon, but there are some curse words, [[spoiler: a person who dies from choking on a bug, another whose corpse is thrown into the sewer]], sexual references, and A LOT of {{black comedy}}. What makes this worse is that Creator/TheHub (now Discovery Family), a family channel, aired this movie! And even better is the reviews on the VHS box that say it's "...fun for the whole family".
123%%* ''Film/MysteryTeam'' is about a group of three friends solving a mystery! [[TemptingFate What's the worst that could happen]]?
124* Believe it or not, ''Film/NightOfTheLivingDead1968'' qualified when it was first released. Thanks to 3D and other movie gimmicks like those created by Creator/WilliamCastle, [[BMovie B-movies]] were popular among children in the '50s and '60s. So, naturally, kids went to see this flick expecting fun-house thrills and instead saw the undead messily devouring human flesh (for starters). Creator/RogerEbert's first review described children watching the movie, silently crying in genuine fear. Ebert stressed that parents really shouldn't allow their kids to go see a movie called ''NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD''.
125%%* ''Film/NineMonths'' is a funny comedy about a mom having a baby that stars Robin Williams in it, and Robin Williams is considered family-friendly, so it must be for kids! Yeah, no. It has some suggestive themes and a Barney-esque mascot swearing at a mom for not buying its merchandise!
126* ''Film/{{Okja}}'': It's a movie about a young girl going on an adventure to find and rescue her animal best friend Okja. Sounds like a kids' movie, until you see the very graphic scenes of animal slaughter.
127* ''Once Upon a Girl'' is animated in the style of the family-friendly Creator/HannaBarbera cartoons, but it is absolutely not appropriate for children in any way. It is a collection of fairy tale parodies in which each segment ends with the characters having sex, with plenty of nudity and foul language scattered throughout.
128%%* ''Film/{{Outbreak}}'' may look like a nice family-friendly movie about a man moving to a new town who gets a monkey for a research project...until it scratches him. It just gets bad from there. The title is a dead giveaway that it's not for kids, plus, it has an RRatedOpening.
129%%* Some parents have taken their younger children to see ''Film/{{Paul}}'', despite the R (15 in the UK) rating and that the posters and ads clearly state that it's from the director of ''Film/{{Superbad}}''. Sure, it's about an alien, but ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial'' this ain't.
130* ''Film/ThePassionOfTheChrist''
131** It's about Jesus and it's from Literature/TheBible and religious things are definitely family-friendly, so that makes it okay, right? Leaving aside that anyone who has read the Bible should recognize a difference between the real thing and "Bible Stories for Children", some parents still ignored the R rating (or intentionally [[AbusiveParents defied the R rating]]) and [[https://web.archive.org/web/20180602045144/http://ew.com/article/2007/02/01/stephen-king-passion-phenomenon/ took their tykes to theaters for this one]]. And it made Stephen King feel ashamed. {{Gorn}} to the point of {{squick}} not withstanding. Hopefully, they learned their lesson and didn't make the same mistake when ''Film/{{Apocalypto}}'' came out. Note that Mel Gibson himself recommended the film for people over 13 and Jim Caviezel (who played Christ in the film) warned that parents should consider the R-rating before letting their children watch it.
132** In Italy, it was [[ValuesDissonance basically rated G(!)]] [[note]]Italy is notoriously lax with film ratings, and only has three: 'tutti' (General), [=VM14=] (not for children under 14) and VM18 (not for children under 18). There are discussions to revise the system: For example, ''Paranormal Activity'' was rated 'tutti', and that did not sit well with audiences there, some of whom had panic attacks at the premiere.[[/note]] The only notable controversies regarding the film there were from liberal Catholic organizations that thought it was at odds with Vatican II's promise ''not'' to paint the Jewish people as responsible for Jesus' death.
133** When ''Series/TheDailyShow'' covered the hype and controversy about the movie, this was spoofed with a shell-shocked correspondent admitting he had taken his little son to see it, not knowing how violent it was, and unable to explain to his child why Jesus was being treated so badly beyond "Because he ''loves'' everybody?" The reasoning from parents who took their kids was that it didn't matter how violent it was, precisely ''because'' it's about Jesus and they needed to understand what Jesus went through on their behalf. Many parents took their kids to see it ''multiple times''. One can only imagine what the kids thought...
134** A sixth-grade teacher got in hot water for showing excerpts of the film to his students, without getting permission from any parents or even the principal. They found out anyway, and he was suspended. To add a bit of irony to the situation, he supposedly showed it to teach a lesson in morality, though the copy he used was a bootleg.
135* ''Film/{{Pixels}}'' is a film featuring a supporting cast of popular video game characters, so it must be family-friendly a la ''WesternAnimation/WreckItRalph'', right? Nope, it earns the PG-13 rating that it deserves. There's a fair amount of profanity, women wearing all too revealing clothing, two characters making out, and one character using chloroform to ''kidnap'' another.
136* ''Film/{{Poltergeist|1982}}'', another movie famously tied to Creator/StevenSpielberg, is hardly appropriate for kids. Still, slapping the creator of other '80s supernatural flicks such as ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial'' is just asking for trouble.
137* ''Franchise/{{Rambo}}'' inspired [[WesternAnimation/RamboTheForceOfFreedom an animated series]] with [[MerchandiseDriven a related toyline]]. The first movie is a kind of depressing action-drama with a ShellShockedVeteran fighting ignorant people who reject him, and the sequel (primary influence on the cartoon) goes into full "action movie where a OneManArmy slaughters dozens". Plus, the cartoon inspired in Brazil [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTxoO2pjdSQ a]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M38pmN9_SVA song]] by a popular kids TV host (which on the video plays with [[{{Gorn}} the latest Rambo movie]] to show how that's a ''huge'' misfire of an inspiration).
138* ''Film/RevengeOfTheRedBaron'' is a comedic horror movie about an evil toy who hunts down a family. Despite its cornball humor, there's quite a few violent scenes and is rated PG-13. So, having a DVD cover [[http://www.imdb.com/media/rm2131661312/tt0110983 like this]] is really misleading.
139* ''Film/{{RIPD}}'' left children shaking in fear outside of the theater. Hell, it scared quite a few ''grown-ups'' due to having [[PrimalFear "soul-killing bullets"]] - that's right, [[CessationOfExistence bullets that kill you]] ''[[CessationOfExistence forever]]'' - as a major plot point. This wasn't bad parenting - their parents supposedly took them to the film [[AnimationAgeGhetto just because it was based off a comic book]]. Even worse is that it was advertised on channels aimed at kids like Cartoon Network when it came out.
140* ''Film/RoboCop1987'' was a movie filled with over-the-top-violence about a grim future, dominated by corporations. [[Film/RoboCop2 The sequel]] retained the R rating (although the original script by Creator/FrankMiller was far more bloody, explicit, and adult than the real movie, and the ExecutiveMeddling made him disenchanted with Hollywood)... but then they decided to follow it with a LighterAndSofter ''Film/RoboCop3'' (even though it was clearly rated PG-13 and still had dark moments) and ''WesternAnimation/RoboCopTheAnimatedSeries'', clearly trying to aim the franchise at children.
141* ''Film/{{Rosita}}'' is one of Creator/MaryPickford's less kid-friendly silent films. She discards her usual childish roles to play a SpicyLatina Spaniard who is forced by a lecherous king to be his mistress.
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145* ''Film/ScottPilgrimVsTheWorld''. Due to the flashy visuals, toilet humor, and videogame references, Website/IMDb users [[PublicMediumIgnorance passed it off as a "kiddie" movie]]. Need we remind you that this is a movie that has sexual references (although mild), Scott accidentally saying that he wants to give Knives a golden shower, [[spoiler:Scott being impaled by the seventh ex (yes, he comes back with a 1-Up, and [[BloodlessCarnage there's no blood]], but still!)]], and one of the exes dying ''from having an orgasm.'' This film actually was not as successful as hoped since [[UncertainAudience it was too "adult" for children and too "kiddie" for most adults]].[[note]] It was rated PG in Canada, although their PG is much more like the older US rating-- films that aren't really for kids but aren't extremely bloody or gory receive it. [[/note]]
146* ''Film/TheSecretLifeOfWalterMitty'': It's a film about a man who daydreams to help him get out of his everyday problems, so it must be for kids, right? Wrong! It contains some swearing, drinking, sex jokes, [[spoiler: a building catching on fire, and the main character going to Afghanistan and getting arrested for it.]] The film wound up with a PG rating, and little kids still saw it despite the scenes mentioned.
147* A little-known comedy called ''Film/ShakesTheClown'' starring comedians Creator/BobcatGoldthwait and Julie Brown was commonly rented by moms who later returned to the video store with the video and a good mad expression on. Despite the R-rating, and Julie Brown being on the cover lying on her stomach [[MaleGaze in a way that allows you to look directly down her cleavage]], many thought this was kiddie fare, being technically a movie about clowns. (You'd think the cleavage on the cover would clue them in).
148* Jonah Hill's ''Film/TheSitter'', seems like a modern day version of ''Film/AdventuresInBabysitting''[[note]](not a hugely family-friendly movie itself, but still commonly seen as a family movie nowadays)[[/note]], right? WRONG!
149* ''Film/ThreeMenAndABaby'' is a wacky '80s classic about three bachelors who find a baby at their doorstep. It's about a baby so it has to be squeaky clean, right? Not exactly. It has quite a lot of sexual references and drug-related plots that might not be suitable for younger viewers, yet is commonly seen as a family film nevertheless.
150* Someone on the Malaysian censorship board decided to grant ''Film/SnakesOnAPlane'' the U Rating (Universal rating, ''meaning that it is suitable for everyone, even babies''), apparently because the title of the movie sounds like it's a clean family comedy outing. It was eventually reclassified as an 18+ movie, but not before a horde of angry parents wrote in to the local press complaining. The Censor? He's most likely out of a job.
151* ''Film/SnowWhiteAndTheHuntsman'': Oh look, another adaptation of a fairy tale Disney made by the producer of ''Film/AliceInWonderland2010''! First of all, this movie was not made by Disney, and second, it's PG-13, due to some violence. There's also some mild IncestSubtext that could make parents (or really anyone) squirm.
152* ''Film/{{Spaceballs}}'' has a PG rating on the DVD cover and was shown on the Creator/DisneyChannel for a while, despite the sex references ("That was my virgin alarm! It's programmed to go off before YOU DO!"), constant strong bad language ("I knew it, I'm surrounded by assholes!"; "We ain't found shit!"; [[ClusterFBomb "Out of order? Fuck! Even in the future nothing works!"]]) and occasional [[FantasticRacism fantastically racist]] remarks ("Funny! She doesn't look Druish [Jewish]!").
153* ''Film/{{Stardust}}'' is a modern fairy tale full of [[BreadEggsMilkSquick adventure, wonder, magic, murder]], treason, and sexual innuendos. Not to mention that plot and cultural references would be definitely over the head of an average 12-year-old.
154* ''Film/TheStraightStory'' is a G-Rated Disney flick directed by Creator/DavidLynch. But it's still not for kids, many of whom would be bored to tears. As a story of a sick old man, traveling hundreds of miles on his lawnmower to reconcile with his estranged and dying brother before he croaks, it's been described as a David Lynch film one could take one's ''parents'' to.
155* ''Film/Strays2023'' seems like a fun movie about talking dogs on an adventure in the vein of ''Film/AirBuddies'' right? WRONG. The movie is rated R and contains many F-bombs and several penis jokes (both human and dog) the goal of the movie even being Reggie wanting to bite his abusive owner's penis off [[spoiler:(which it is fulfilled as a bloody and graphic permanent organ removal as an intentional choice not placing a Strong Bloody Violence MPA descriptor, which would spoil the final result)]].
156* ''Film/TankGirl''. Has a scene implying that the title character had sex with a mutated kangaroo, one in which a little girl is dropped into a pipe to slowly drown, and some horror in which the BigBad drains the water out of one of his {{mooks}} and drinks it. Of course, nobody who is remotely familiar with [[ComicBook/TankGirl the source material]] would have imagined that the film would be family-friendly.
157* This Website/IMDb trivia entry for Creator/TreyParkerAndMattStone's ''Film/TeamAmericaWorldPolice'' says it all: "Despite almost getting an NC-17 Rating in the States, the film was promoted as a 'kids and family' movie in several European countries, and rated fit for all accordingly." Probably because just as in America [[AnimationAgeGhetto animation is automatically for kids]], in Europe, puppets must be automatically for kids.
158* ''Film/{{Ted}}'':
159** It seems like a family movie about a teddy bear and a man who have lived together for 20 years by the [[Creator/SethMacfarlane nice man]] who brought us ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' (which isn't family-friendly either, despite idiot viewers who think so and MoralGuardians saying it should be), doesn't it? No! It's rated R and it shows! To make sure people know, Universal made a [[http://collider.com/ted-movie-theater-standee/ standee for the film]] that featured the eponymous bear holding up the R rating and what it's rated R for.
160** To give you a hint as to why the movie deserves an "R"-rating, the eponymous teddy bear's personality is perverted and addicted to drugs, and lewd. Since it was rated R, numerous gross-out and adult gags [[NeverTrustATrailer were toned down for TV and advertising]]. For example, one overused clip has Ted showing off to a co-worker, only to weird her out when he starts humping a barcode scanner. In the actual movie? He goes from humping to fellating a chocolate bar. The gross out reaction his colleague gives? She is disgusted when he uses soap dispensers to simulate being ejaculated on.
161** It was rated 16 in Brazil... and yet a deputy who brought his 11-year-old son to watch it was outraged and decided to ask the Ministry of Justice to ban it [[MoralGuardians on the grounds that it was morally offensive]]. The Internet didn't take this stupidity lightly, and he changed his plea to upping the rating to 18. The results: the Ministry deferred his request, [[StreisandEffect and the movie topped the box office]].
162* Although most DVD artwork for the film ''Film/{{Threads}}'' makes it clear it's dark, don't be fooled by the fact that it has a PG rating in America. It's not a light documentary. It's not for kids.
163* There have been many reports of families taking their kids to see ''Film/{{Us}}'', simply because they were mislead by the fact that it was about a family taking a summer vacation. It's actually about evil clones of the family that haunt where they are staying who try to kill them.
164* ''Werewolves Within'' is a family-friendly game that is rated E for everyone. The ''Film/WerewolvesWithin'' film on the other hand? Nope because it got an R rating and it's pretty surprising to see an E rated game get adapted into an R rated film. The verdict? gore, jump scares, some sexual content like a sexual gesture and touching someone's bottom, and bad words.
165* ''Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit'': Besides [[NightmareFuel/WhoFramedRogerRabbit scariness,]] there's the sex-related jokes, a few swear words, and a plot thread involving Eddie's alcoholism. And let's not forget this is a murder mystery, with several instances of real-life violence, including a man shot several times and left hanging from an editing machine by his necktie. There's a reason Creator/{{Disney}} released it under the Creator/TouchstonePictures label. However, Disney would later produce a handful of original Roger Rabbit shorts that were shown prior to movies released under their main title, like ''Film/HoneyIShrunkTheKids''.
166* ''Film/WienerDog'': It's a movie about a cute little dachshund... written and directed by the same guy who made ''Film/WelcomeToTheDollhouse'', and intended as a direct spinoff. Quite a lot of dog-lovers were shocked, along with parents who ignored the film's R-rating, thereby exposing their little darlings to images of animal abuse, neglect, drug use and terrorism.
167* Kevin Kline once said that he did ''Film/WildWildWest'' [[SoMyKidsCanWatch so his then eight-year-old son and then four-year-old daughter could see him in a movie.]] However, the film is an adaptation of ''Series/TheWildWildWest'', which was well known for causing controversy when it aired due to it being very violent.
168* ''Film/WinnieThePoohBloodAndHoney'' is an adaptation of [[Literature/WinnieThePooh a beloved children's book]]... but turned into a slasher film. In October 2023, [[https://news.sky.com/story/miami-school-receives-complaints-after-pupils-shown-winnie-the-pooh-themed-horror-film-by-teacher-12983060 an elementary school teacher in Miami]] thought it would be a good idea to show the film to his class, but he had to stop the film after twenty minutes, despite the kids' horrified reactions. The director was left hoping the kids wouldn't be permanently traumatized.
169* In the UK, a number of parents apparently took young children to see ''Film/TheWomanInBlack'' because it starred ''Franchise/HarryPotter'' actor Creator/DanielRadcliffe and it was rated 12A (albeit edited to tone down the horrific imagery[[note]]mostly remixing the background music to get rid of the scare chords, lowering the volume to half on a scene of a dead boy shown caked in mud and shrieking, digitally darkening any scene showing the rotting corpses of dead children, cutting the scene of a woman on a chair preparing to hang herself, and cutting another scene of a girl being set on fire[[/note]]), so it couldn't be that bad. The resulting protests over the film's terrifying nature and DownerEnding led the [[CensorshipBureau BBFC]] to change its rules about horror to pay more attention to a film's mood and plot, as opposed to simply going by the level of graphic violence and gore.
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173* In ''Film/BeingJohnMalkovich'', John Cusack plays a puppeteer who puts on a rather racy puppet show in public, and a clueless dad mistakenly lets his young daughter watch it. This does not end well.
174* In the second film adaptation of ''Film/DiaryOfAWimpyKid'' titled ''Rodrick Rules'' there is a scene in the movie where Greg and Rowley watched an in-universe horror movie called ''The Foot'' during a sleepover. Not only did Greg and Rowley had trouble sleeping since they think that the titular foot is going to the bed (which later turned out that to be Manny) but Greg got punished for selecting that movie for sleepover.
175* In ''Film/DunstonChecksIn'', the kid's dad turns on the TV to calm him down and says, "Ah, a nice old black and white movie. You'll be out in no time". Meanwhile, Kong has escaped and is about to abduct the heroine, sending the kid straight into nightmare land.
176* In ''Film/JerseyGirl'', the protagonist takes his daughter to see ''Theatre/SweeneyTodd'', (which features a barber who [[VillainProtagonist slits the throats of his customers and bakes them into pies]]) assuming it's just some silly musical.
177* In ''Film/MeetTheFockers'', a baby changes the channel from ''Series/ElmosWorld'' to ''Film/{{Scarface|1983}}''. His parents get shocked at this.
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