A teen girl showers we see her bare shoulders and upper chest and panics when she sees her younger brother using the toilet at the same time we see his bare legs to the hip. Several women wear revealing outfits revealing cleavage, abdomens, bare legs at a club where they dance suggestively and one woman dances with a young boy; a man cuts in and tries to dance with her but she is not interested.
A woman dresses up like Brittany Spears for Halloween, wearing a mini skirt and a button up blouse that reveals cleavage and bare legs to the thigh. A teen girl wears a "sexy kitty" costume that reveals cleavage. A teen girl wears shorts that reveal her bare legs to the upper thigh. A boy is shown wearing jockey-style underwear and his bare chest, abdomen and legs are visible. We see a picture of a woman's body wearing a skimpy outfit cleavage, abdomen and legs are visible with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's head on it.
A teen boy tries to flirt with a teen girl in a couple of scenes. A woman whose husband died recently is dating a much younger man. A man tells a teen girl, "I have a yeast infection. A boy is nearly run down by a car. Several stink bombs, firecrackers and other explosives are thrown into a man's house he is frightened but does not appear harmed. A man climbs a ladder on the outside of a building and throws a roll of toilet paper through and open window; the toilet paper lands on a lit candle and catches fire, and the man sprays the fire with a hose and douses it.
Victoria Justice also stars in the TV series Zoey Thomas McDonell shows up as another attractive bad boy in Prom. Other characters challenged by babysitting duties include The Court Jester , Mrs.
Doubtfire and The Pacifier. Fun Size Parent Guide Families may be fooled into thinking this trashy title is intended for pre-teens, when it really isn't even appropriate for teens. Overall D. Release date October 26, Violence C-. Run Time: 87 minutes Official Movie Site. Get Content Details. The Guide to our Grades. About author. Rod Gustafson has worked in various media industries since High-school senior Wren Victoria Justice is still grieving the death of her father when school hunk Aaron Riley Thomas McDonnell asks her to his exclusive Halloween party.
That motivates Wren to get into costume, but her widowed mother Chelsea Handler wants to party with her young boy-toy, so Wren is forced to take her mute, candy-loving, Spider-Man-dressed little brother, Albert Jackson Nicoll , trick-or-treating instead. After losing track of him, Wren enlists help from smitten nerd Roosevelt Thomas Mann and her best friend Jane Levy to find her missing brother. Eight-year-old Albert, meanwhile, ends up on his own Halloween adventure, which includes helping a convenience store manager get revenge on the guy who stole his ex-girlfriend.
Some of it is legitimately funny -- like when Handler, dressed like school-girl Britney Spears , shows up at her younger boyfriend's party only to realize in horror that she doesn't want to party like a year-old anymore. And then there's Roosevelt's lesbian Earth-mothers improv masters Ana Gasteyer and Kerri Kenney , who insist on speaking to him in ancient languages and demand absolute truth at all times. The majority of Fun Size , however, feels slapped together, lacking focus and downright confusing to audiences expecting family entertainment from production studio Nickelodeon and its popular starlet, Justice.
Albert is certainly more entertaining than Wren, whose story arc is predictable to anyone who's ever seen a teen movie. With his chubby cheeks and devious grin, Albert is reminiscent of Ralphie from A Christmas Story and makes you root for him. Unfortunately, the movie itself isn't deserving of the same. Families can talk about what message it sends when a kid-oriented company puts out media that's meant for older audiences.
Who do you think Fun Size is intended to appeal to? Does it succeed? What life-changing lessons do the characters learn throughout the night? Is it believable that Wren would choose Roosevelt over Aaron? Can you think of a movie in which a "plain" but smart girl triumphs over the pretty but popular one? How does the movie depict teen drinking?
Are there realistic consequences? Common Sense Media's unbiased ratings are created by expert reviewers and aren't influenced by the product's creators or by any of our funders, affiliates, or partners. See how we rate. Streaming options powered by JustWatch. Common Sense Media, a nonprofit organization, earns a small affiliate fee from Amazon or iTunes when you use our links to make a purchase.
Thank you for your support. Our ratings are based on child development best practices. We display the minimum age for which content is developmentally appropriate. The star rating reflects overall quality. Learn how we rate. Parents' Ultimate Guide to Support our work! Corona Column 3 Use these free activities to help kids explore our planet, learn about global challenges, think of solutions, and take action.
Fun Size. But, at the last minute, Wren is left in charge of her strange and uncommunicative 8-year-old brother Albert Jackson Nicoll so her mom can go off with her year-old boy toy to a Halloween bash. Most of the movie centers on Wren searching for her little brother while he goes on a series of misadventures that are never remotely credible, clever or comical.
Meanwhile, Wren connects with a school pal, Roosevelt Thomas Mann , whose lesbian moms are a wanly funny caricature as they jointly weave a giant tapestry of Barack Obama's smiling face. They insist on speaking ancient Greek to their son just before he takes their Volvo on a mission to help Wren.
Of course, the requisite car crash ensues, in a drawn-out and unfunny manner involving a giant chicken statue. Of course no real harm comes to Albert, given the sugar-coated world in which this inane comedy resides.
Certainly it's not meant to be realistic.
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