Quizzes & Puzzles10 mins ago
Can I take my 10 year old to see a 15 rated film
My ten year old is pestering me to take him to see Sanctum - the new 3D film . I have been online to buy the tickets but see this film as a 15 rating. I will accompany him but am now unsure if he will be allowed in
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Quite so, Coobeastie.
The idea of film classifications is to give parents a quick guide to the film’s content and suitability. The best thing you can do for your pestering son, 007, is to advise him of this, tell him he’s not seeing it and that’s that. Far better to do that than to suggest to him that the law is there simply to be circumvented by whatever means possible.
The idea of film classifications is to give parents a quick guide to the film’s content and suitability. The best thing you can do for your pestering son, 007, is to advise him of this, tell him he’s not seeing it and that’s that. Far better to do that than to suggest to him that the law is there simply to be circumvented by whatever means possible.
You can buy items in the shop that have age limitations to them if you are over the accepted age and have a child with you. As long as the staff have no reason to believe that you might be purchasing the item for the child or someone under the legal age.
Sometime this is seen in the extreme, but it is perfectly understandable. I work in a newsagents, and we regularly have under 18s ask for cigarettes and when they are refused, pop outsid to the car and ask their parents to get them for them.
At the end of the day, we care about our jobs and don't want to get fined/sacked/jailed. And we are well within our right to refuse people.
However, on this topic. Cinemas are really clamping down on ID-ing people when they buy tickets and then when you enter the actual cinema room.
So it would be unlikely that you would get away with it. I got ID'ed for an 18 cert film for the first time since I was 15 a couple of months ago. I was really shocked!
Sometime this is seen in the extreme, but it is perfectly understandable. I work in a newsagents, and we regularly have under 18s ask for cigarettes and when they are refused, pop outsid to the car and ask their parents to get them for them.
At the end of the day, we care about our jobs and don't want to get fined/sacked/jailed. And we are well within our right to refuse people.
However, on this topic. Cinemas are really clamping down on ID-ing people when they buy tickets and then when you enter the actual cinema room.
So it would be unlikely that you would get away with it. I got ID'ed for an 18 cert film for the first time since I was 15 a couple of months ago. I was really shocked!
I do think the point here is should you be letting him see it rather than ways to evade the system? I was scared for a long time of Cruella De Ville after seeing Disney's 101 Dalmatians when I was about 10! You can never tell what impressions are going to form with children - presumably why they have the rating system in the first place.
I probably wouldn't, maybe if he was 13 it would be different, i found this out
http:// www.imd b.com/t ...0881 320/par entalgu ide CLICK ON IT IF YOU DARE
[about sanctum] good luck!
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[about sanctum] good luck!
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