This film is fun for kids six and up, as it has
a few scary parts.
Not exact matches
I'm worn out from chasing adorable nieces around the house (apparently, I make an excellent
scary monster — perhaps a career change is in order), but I'll see if I can't crank out a couple of articles that have been simmering for the last
few weeks to do my
part to give you an excuse to hog the family computer.
There is no sex or foul language, but the images might be considered
scary (though far from terrifying) and the dour themes of a planet full of dead people and menacing robots who co-opt the skulls of former living beings for
parts might still produce a
few bad dreams for the more impressionable members of the audience.
Although the Nordschleife gets the adrenaline pumping (it's
scary fast in
parts, and there are
few opportunities to get clear sight lines of what lies ahead), the Clubsport S contributes little to the drama — it just gets on with the job of hustling down the road as quickly as possible, carrying far more corner speed than one would have thought possible.
That being said, one of the best and
scariest parts of Dead Space is the element of surprise, so if you don't want anything spoiled I'll just give you a heads up that you may only want to read the next paragraph and the last paragraph as everything in between has a
few scares that would be all the better without knowing about them.
Even if you think it's all well - intentioned, consider this:»... Why do well intentioned people trying in all honesty and effort to accomplish organizational missions make terrible decisions... Groupthink, where bad decision making behind closed doors by «the
few» adversely affect the many, is a
scary part of group behavior.