My point is, the whole sequence is by far the most upsetting bit of the film and involves mature themes like prostitution, sex and brothels so you may want to cover your child's eyes or skip through this bit and just tell them what happens, as all of the prostitute bits are in one sequence. In this sequence she also sells a tooth, you don't see it, just prostitutes crowding round her while the man buying it takes out a pair of plier things. The sequence is set in a brothel and there are lots of prostitutes showing a lot of cleavage. She sings a very emotional song afterwards. It is not "sexy" or revealing or explicit in any way. A man lies on top of her briefly inside a box thing (both fully clothed as far as you can see) while she cries silently. SEX: There is a sequence where a woman prostitutes herself out of desperation. A man shoves snow down the front of a woman's dress so she scratches his face and there is a little blood on his cheek.
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His body lands in the water and you hear a crack as his back breaks. A man commits suicide by jumping off a bridge. Also a woman who pretended to be a man so she could fight in the revolution and be with the man she loved gets shot and she has an emotional song with the man she loves while she is dying. It is quite upsetting as some of the men cry and later you see his dead body (just him lying on the floor with a bit of blood on his coat). A boy (around 11) is shot dead during this scene as well. Many men fall over dead, but hardly any blood during the revolution scenes. There are some scenes of the French Revolution, where a lot of shots are fired. The police catch a man who was stealing before throwing him on the ground, kicking him and whacking his head very hard with a truncheon so it bleeds. The convicts look ragged and beaten up, and they are hauling in a ship with their bare hands using ropes. VIOLENCE: The film starts off with the main character being given parole. Anyway, I'm going to skip the raving and get on with the review. And the cast is brilliant - Hugh Jackman, Russel Crowe, Anne Hathaway, Amanda Seyfried etc. There is almost no talking involved, it's all singing, but they make it work fantastically. We watch it together lots and we cry at the many sad bits and sometimes sing along to the great songs. Les Miserables is my favourite film, and my daughter's too. But ultimately, Les Miserables is about the redemptive power of love and faith, and there are many moments of hope and beauty amid the miserable ones. Expect some bawdy lyrics/references (with a sprinkling of curse words, including one "s-t"), a very sad scene in which an unwilling prostitute "entertains" a client, plenty of cleavage, some blood, and a few very sad deaths (including one suicide). Characters suffer painful beatings, degrade themselves out of desperation, engage in gun and bayonet fights, claw their way through unspeakable filth, and more. The film deals with abject poverty, prostitution, imprisonment, corruption, war, and death all of which fans of the musical will be expecting - but bringing the story to the screen means it has a much more realistic feel (despite the fact that the actors sing virtually all of the dialogue). Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, and Anne Hathaway star in the gritty, often-heartbreaking tale of justice, duty, love, and revolution. Parents need to know that this all-star version of Les Miserables is an adaptation of the world-famous stage musical, which itself is based on Victor Hugo's classic 1862 novel.