100 Days in the Jungle (TV Movie 2002) Poster

(2002 TV Movie)

Parents Guide

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Sex & Nudity

  • Several captives of the same gender sleep next to each other, but there is no evidence of romance or sexual behavior.
  • The oil workers are warned against engaging with prostitutes because they have a disease.
  • In the beginning of the movie, a woman wears a swimsuit that reveals her back.
  • Several scenes where men are seen shirtless.

Violence & Gore

  • Once the oil workers arrived in the jungle, the guerrillas threatened them with gunshots if they ever tried to escape. This never happens to a single worker.
  • A fight breaks out between two oil workers, but not much more happens than a few pushes and shoves.
  • A man walks off to the lead guerrilla in order to befriend him, but the guerrillas at first think he is trying to escape, so they cock their guns.
  • An oil worker holds a picture of a guerrilla and his family, but then has a piece of it violently ripped off by the guerrilla he looks at.

Profanity

Alcohol, Drugs & Smoking

  • Near the end of the movie, when the eight oil workers have been liberated from the guerrillas, they are all offered drinks at a bar for free.

Frightening & Intense Scenes

  • The guerrillas tell the oil workers that they will let them die in the jungle.
  • The oil workers are forced to march in the rain all night, and one of them collapses due to a crippled ankle. The lead guerrilla suggests that he be left behind, but the captives oppose this.
  • Knowing that her husband has been kidnapped while in Ecuador, a woman and her daughter slowly become more and more upset as the film progresses.
  • Citizens of Canada are warned not to go to Colombia or northern Ecuador because they are not safe.
  • A child is commonly seen working as a guerrilla, and a job like that would be very intense on a child.

Spoilers

The Parents Guide items below may give away important plot points.

Frightening & Intense Scenes

  • Not far from the beginning of the movie, guerrillas running through scare off many civilians and kidnap eight oil workers, along with two Ecuadorian women to be used as translators. There is an extreme amount of rough pushing and shoving, and the guerrillas are armed with guns, which they use to shoot two soldiers.
  • Near the end of the movie, the oil workers are escorted to their camp where they are to be executed, for they have veils placed on their head, but none of them ever die, for a band of citizens who have been working to set them free throughout the movie comes to rescue them.

See also

Taglines | Plot Summary | Synopsis | Plot Keywords


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