INTRODUCING ... MSN'S CINEMAMA
By Martha Brockenbrough
MSN Cinemama
Back before I became a parent, a time that now seems foggy and
significantly better from a personal-hygiene standpoint, I recall
hearing something about children and videos.
"Watch them often, blah blah blah, thousands of times, blah blah
blah. Want to kill Raffi, blah blah."
When I first heard this warning about children's insistence on
watching movies again and again, all I thought was, "Whatever. She
looks like she maybe didn't shower today. And those sweatpants. Wow.
She's, like, given up."
There's nothing like becoming a parent to help a person
understand the relationship between kids and their movies.
Kids aren't like us. If there's a movie they love, they want to
watch it over and over. They want to talk about it again and again.
There's no answer to the question, "What happened to Nemo?" that can
satisfy a small child who's just watched "Finding Nemo" for the first time. A
parent can only answer it patiently, repeatedly, until the small
child grows somewhat larger, and Nemo is replaced by the amusingly
gassy Shrek.
As tiring as the Nemo phenomenon can be, it's not as bad as when
you drive to the theater, find a parking spot roughly in the same
ZIP code and empty out your bank account for movie tickets, popcorn
and sodas -- only to find your kids hate the movie or are
inappropriately scared by giant robot heads projected onto a 60-foot
screen or are bored silly at the idea of talking race cars and their
nostalgia for Route 66.
That's why I'm becoming the Cinemama on MSN Movies -- so that
parents like me can read about movies and learn the really important
stuff before buying the tickets or the video. In each column,
I'll let you know the following about a movie:
- How scary is it? Does it have loud parts that will make a small
child go fetal?
- Does it have language that might give a parent pause, even if
it meets the "everyday" standard for a G rating?
- Do the characters do things kids will copy, causing severe
parental annoyance?
- Will the story make sense to kids? Likewise, will they care?
- Will grown-ups enjoy it as much as their kids? Will it stand up
to repeated viewing?
- And finally, what happened to Nemo (or whoever else was in the
movie)? I won't give spoilers, but I will give a sense of what the
movie is about.
In addition to the reviews, I'll write columns about the pleasure
parents can take from family movies, whether they're well-crafted
stories, useful cautionary tales or just feasts for the eyes. Even
in a children's movie, Colin Firth is still hot.
Martha Brockenbrough is author of "It Could Happen to You:
Diary of a Pregnancy and Beyond." She's also founder of SPOGG, the
Society for the Promotion of Good Grammar. And she writes an
educational humor column for Encarta. Check out her site at http://marthabee.com