How old is coraline supposed to be




















In the movie Coraline , when Coraline is getting ready to go to bed after not finding her parents there's an old photo that shows her with natural brown hair. This probably means she at one point dyed it to her iconic blue hair.

Also, the bear fountain behind them is real! It is at the Detroit Zoo. Gaiman's previously adapted Coraline was also animated and was the best-received adaptation of his work to date. Wybie is presumably part black , evident from his: hair, facial features, and a tanned complexion because Mrs. Lovat is black. Wybie has coarse, curly, dark brown hair. How old is Coraline Jones supposed to be? Category: movies family and children movies. What's the message in Coraline?

What do the button eyes mean in Coraline? Why did wybie Grandma let Coraline move in? Where is Laika Studios? Is Coraline a dream? What state is Coraline set in? What happened to the other mother in Coraline? Who is on the dollar bill in Coraline? Why is Mr bobinsky blue? Why is Coraline called Caroline?

He is wishing he had never seen it and asking us how could it be G or PG rated, and what makes someone think up such awful things? I personally thought it was creepy to the point of disturbing, myself. So what was it that was so frightening? How about the 'pretend' parents in the alternative world who offer the main character a present which was a gift box of two buttons and a sharp needle and thread to stitch over her eyelids?

And when she refuses to become one of them, they throw her into a brick cell of a bedroom where she meets the souls of three children with creepy voices who were previously killed the cat suggests they were eaten because they were yummy who ask to be saved. Her real parents also beg for help by writing HELP backwards on a frosty window. The pretend parents morph into evil creatures and it gets worse.

We tried to push through it thinking it better to brush it off as it is bound to improve, until our poor kid ran screaming out of the house and had to be held. We turned it off and found a litte kids cartoon to watch to change the mood for bedtime. Barely sleep though. The next day he was like a zombie, thinking about the movie all day. Now he wishes he could erase the memory, and I urge any parent NOT to traumatise their child by accident watching this. I'm going to have to work pretty hard in fixing this situation re sleep and attachment due to sheer terror.

What sort of movie maker does this? Helped me decide 2. Had useful details 3. Read my mind 3. Adult Written by Lokz97 June 30, My four year old My four year old adores this movie and doesn't have any problems with it. It was his choice to watch it, as he's kind of creepy and extremely creative himself, and he watches this movie at least once a week. Reading other reviews I've seen that kids have been scarred from this and I have to say it makes me laugh.

My son has watched this movie so many times I can quote it by now, he's a very tender loving boy and this is by far one of his all time favorite movies. Read my mind 4. Adult Written by jordanb2 September 9, The Best I read the book before the movie was announced, that being said I think everyone complaining about the movie as is would be terrified at the content of the book and the amount of horror and big scares they took out.

Im shocked parents go off the reviews and word of mouth from other people without doing the slightest bit of research themselves, and then get upset when the film is not what they thought it would be. Firstly, the trailer makes it obvious the films not for young children. Third of all, the scene that everyones going nuts about, realize that this is a stop motion film therefore animated therefore please get over it.

Also, if you are so worried about your child growing up and becoming an adult ,why bother having kids in the first place? Helped me decide. Parent of a 3, 7, and 8-year-old Written by momof3sweeties March 16, Coraline I had my Father in law take my eight year old and my 6 year old to see this movie.

First of all, I had no idea that 3-D movies cost so much. Secondly, the movie scared both of them. My eight year old who is never scared of anything seemed fine when she came home from the movie, but cried at night because the movie frightened her. She could not go to sleep without all of the lights on. My son had to sleep with us. Although it is a good movie with a nice plot, I would not recommend this movie to anyone in elementary school. This is more for Middle School aged children and older.

I wish that the media would have stressed this. Thank you. Read my mind 1. Parent of a 1, 1, 2, 7, 11, and year-old Written by Finley S. March 17, It's amazing I am watching this movie with my kids and I'm just amazed! It is awesome! It's my children's favorite movie. Had useful details 1. Parent of a 8-year-old Written by rienovo March 20, Very good movie, but I would agree with other viewers that it is too scary for children 8 and under.

She spent the last half of the movie in her father's lap. And we didn't even see it in 3D! So much for animation being less scary! I wish I had read the reviews before going! Read my mind 2. Parent of a 3-year-old Written by Kissum February 27, My 3 year old and I enjoyed it! I took my 3 year old to see it today, and she loved it. I can see where the almost naked woman can be seen as inappropriate, but the way it was presented wasn't an issue for me.

My daughter thought it was funny, and didn't say anything about it afterward. There are some slightly scary moments, but nothing that terrified her.

The theater was full of little kids ish and none of them cried or had to leave. I think this is one of those things you need to judge based on your child, but I definitely don't feel the 9 years and up rating is justified. Parent Written by spedrunr June 23, Coraline is precocious and intelligent, an old soul who seems far more adult than her actual pre-teen age.

Animation has made her three-dimensional in her physicality, and the story's writing has made her character multidimensional and complex as well.

But one of the darker aspects of Coraline that adults in particular would pick up on is how she can be as actively mean as both of her mothers. Her Real Mother is extremely dismissive of her daughter and openly expresses how much of a nuisance she thinks Coraline is. Wybie often has verbal diarrhea, it's true, but does that warrant Coraline calling him "Why-were-you-born," especially when she knows he's being raised by his grandmother?

Coraline also calls the Cat Keith David "wuss puss" on multiple occasions, but she actually apologizes for that once she realizes he can talk in the Other World. Adults will notice how the mild verbal abuse Coraline receives from her mother spills from Coraline onto others. It's another element that adds to the horror story reality of Coraline. A move from Michigan to Oregon is no small feat, and Coraline's parents hired a moving company to help them out on the almost 2,mile journey.

And while the Pink Palace has been broken up into three separate homes, Apartment A where the Jones family will be living takes up the majority of the main house. It's rather huge, to boot. After working all day to bring beds, boxes, and other furniture into the house, a distracted Charlie Jones John Hodgman almost doesn't tip the movers at all after signing for their things.

When the mover politely reminds him, Charlie gives him a whopping one dollar. Adults who've hired movers in the past know how hard they work and that the men who do the actual heavy lifting often rely on tips. It's clear the Jones family is worried about money as they finish their book, but that's no excuse to not to properly compensate people for their work.

If they couldn't pay, they should have moved their stuff themselves. Kids probably won't notice the insult embedded in this moment. Coraline 's Oregon setting is mentioned many times by multiple characters. But only an adult would notice the city name, Ashland, on the packages of cheese Mr. Bobinsky Ian McShane gets to help train his mouse circus. Ashland is home to a renowned Shakespeare festival every year, a festival that appears to be happening while Coraline takes place.

We see signs for the festival in town, and to really bring the message home for the theatre-loving adults in the room, Coraline has a number of Shakespeare references sprinkled in its dialogue. The downstairs neighbors Miss Spinks Jennifer Saunders and Forcible Dawn French do a dance while reciting, "What a piece of work is man," an iconic monologue from Hamlet. Only adults would notice that these titles sound like Shakespearean porn.

When Coraline grudgingly goes into town with her mother to get her new school uniform since it's on sale for half off, she sees a pair of colorful yellow and red striped gloves that stand out among all the drab gray clothes in the department store.

Barely containing her contempt for her daughter, Mel Jones won't even consider the gift for Coraline, not even by offering conditions for its purchase like chores or other things. She just says no. That is a whole lot of cash for a pair of kids' gloves that'll potentially be destroyed in a matter of weeks. The Jones family definitely isn't in the midwest anymore. English-speaking adults should be familiar with the expression "gravy train," a term that Dictionary.

The word gravy has long meant 'easy profits,' and the term is believed to come from 19th-century railroad slang, although the earliest recorded use dates from the early s. And in Coraline , when she has her first dinner with her Other Mother and Father, the Other Mother has the gravy bowl for mashed potatoes riding on an actual train. This is a clever visual metaphor that only older folks would be able to put into context: When Coraline goes to the Other World, she's getting everything she wants as easily as asking for it when in her Real World it's always a struggle.

The initial charm of the Other World is exactly Coraline riding the gravy train until she finally realizes that the luxuries will require sewing over her eyes with buttons and allowing the Other Mother to eat her soul. There's nothing gravy about that. There are so many visual cues in Coraline that foreshadow the horrifying turns the story takes as its protagonist ultimately gets kidnapped by a child-eating monster. One of these moments takes place when Other Father shows Coraline his incredible garden.

Coraline is bedazzled by the colors and the variety of plants blooming, a stark contrast to the garden in her Real World that is comprised of piles of dirt and dead vines. However, looking closer with adult eyes, that Other Garden isn't as benign as it seems. Other Father has many carnivorous plants in that garden, and one pitcher plant is already devouring a frog. Coraline is delighted by a cluster of small purple flowers on vines, which are actually Venus flytraps, another flesh-eating plant.

Later on, those same mesmerizing flytraps try to kill Coraline by biting her and pulling her into the deep well.



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