Parents should know that it does have some strong language (including a crude reference to a gynecological problem), some violence, and sexual references and situations, including teen sex and adultery.Parents: Set preferences and get age-appropriate recommendations with Common Sense Media Plus. That decision wouldn't be fatal if the movie had caved in and admitted it was a comedy, but, no, it also wants to contain moments of pathos, suspense and insight, and it's too flimsy to support them. These two men, however, are based on real “Sleepover Bandits” also named Joe and Terry (played here by Willis and Thornton, respectively), and several plot points that seem oddly contrived turn out to be based on truth; this is the kind of movie based on a story so bizarre that it seems unbelievable as fiction. At one point, Terry says to Kate, "I don't think you're crazy. Common Sense and other associated names and logos are trademarks of Common Sense Media, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization (FEIN: 41-2024986).What to Watch, Read, and Play While Your Kids Are Stuck IndoorsStoke kids' love of reading with great summer storiesTeachers: Find the best edtech tools for your classroom with in-depth expert reviews5 sitios web recomendados por maestros para ayudar a tus niños con el aprendizaje en casaWide Open School: recursos para el aprendizaje a distanciaCCPA: Protect your family's data privacy under new California law. You can stay a night at Dracula’s castle using Airbnb.

Terry comes up with the ingenious idea of sleeping overnight with the bank manager and going with them in the morning to the bank. for crime. The first Anderson/Wilson offbeat, talky comedy.

This is a movie about con games at every level.

Sisters Audrey and Jordan. Get full reviews, ratings, and advice delivered weekly to your inbox. You may be surprised to learn that The One and Only Ivan—a new Disney+ movie that began streaming on Friday—is based on the true story of a real-life … Don't let the sub-titling scare you away from this movie. Oh, and by the way, the real Joe did escape in a cement mixer. How did she get into a situation where she felt too little, and how did that change?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.Common Sense Media, a nonprofit organization, earns a small affiliate fee from Amazon or iTunes when you use our links to make a purchase. I think you're bored."

They become loveable folk heroes (people actually enjoy being robbed by them), and a would-be stuntman (Troy Garrity) and an unhappy runaway wife (Cate Blanchett) join the gang.It has robberies, getaways, funny disguises, and a romantic triangle, but it's really about the conversations and repartee, deftly directed by Barry Levinson and impeccably delivered by the cast. I am going to show you what life is really like when I hang out with my sister Jordan in real life. Be the first to review this title.BANDITS centers on Terry (Billy Bob Thornton) and Joe (Bruce Willis), two charming rascals in love with the same woman.

The two decide to rob banks and raise the money to move out of the country and start a business of their own. You're the boys from TV -- the Sleepover Bandits. The hostages are an eclectic bunch, including a narcoleptic bank manager and a family with precocious kids (who happen to be Willis’ real life daughters). We display the minimum age for which content is developmentally appropriate.

Thornton is terrific as the guy who always thinks he is the smartest person in the room (and usually is), but who has "issues" with everything from germs to antique furniture to the hair of former Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli. Classic tale of two famous outlaws; violence, cursing. Give them ideas? As Joe tears out of the exercise yard in a hijacked cement mixer, the prisoners are shown shaking the chain-link fence and chanting, “Joe! But this is really a movie for grown-ups, not because the language or violence or sexuality is any more intense than any other PG-13, but because it is just not something most kids will appreciate.Families can talk about whether it is true that no one is hurt when money is stolen from a bank and whether robbers become folk heroes in real life and what the film-makers do to get audiences to root for the "bad guys."

Joe! I guess that means I'm a hostage." Some reviews of this movie make a comparison to the Spice Girls.