None
11 of 12 found this to have none
After a lengthy scene involving multiple of Ernest's personalities, one of them, Bunny Jeanette, asks "Do you smell fish?"
None.
Mild
8 of 13 found this mild
This is the most violent and scary Ernest film. A troll steals the souls of 5 children.
Mild
7 of 10 found this mild
Use of "Bull" twice
1 use of damn, screw, shut up, idiot, jerk, gosh, boogerlips and dork 2 uses of wimp and snot 1 with sucker 1 with wad 3 uses of butt 1 with head 1 with breath
One use of the word "Damn".
None
11 of 13 found this to have none
None.
Moderate
6 of 16 found this moderate
The movies premise is a troll named Trantor who steals the souls of children, turning them into wooden dolls to bring back his army of trolls. Its scarier than it sounds, its very cheesy and the parts that are meant to be scary are actually funny. Kids can handle it.
Audiences expecting a purely silly Ernest outing may be surprised by the film's scarier moments, where the evil troll stalks and attacks children. Eerie atmosphere, sound design, misdirection, and slimy monster effects are all employed to create a considerable level of fear during these scenes, which are played straight in contrast to the rest of the film's comedic tone.
The design of Trantor and the other trolls were created by noted effects artists, the Chiodo Bros (Killer Klowns from Outer Space). They are gross, ugly and rather surreal looking, with lots of slime and exaggerated features (bulbous noses, big ears, gnarled teeth, etc). May be frightening for some children.