Common Sense Media Review
By Michael Ordona , based on child development research. How do we rate?
age 13+
Mild but talky look at Churchill's early days in power.
Parents Need to Know
Why Age 13+?
Any Positive Content?
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Language
some
At least one use of "s--t," plus "goddamn," "bugger," "good God."
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Drinking, Drugs & Smoking
a little
Churchill was a drinker, which is shown, but he's never shown drunk. Lots of smoking.
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Violence & Scariness
very little
The film is set in wartime, but no violence is shown. It takes place almost entirely in England before the Blitz. British troops are shown holed up in a French church moments before an attack (via bomb, in an explosion viewers don't see). A little bit of blood on wounded soldiers.
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Positive Messages
a lot
The story of this part of Churchill's career is all about courage -- specifically, the courage to stand by your core beliefs against all odds. The British faced a dreadful choice: Give in to the Nazis in order to survive, or refuse to surrender and possibly lose many, many lives as a result. Churchill led them down the latter path.
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Positive Role Models
some
Many noted political figures appear; each is given reasonable motivation for his choices, whether to fight or surrender. Even the king (George VI) is portrayed positively, as wise and patient. But Churchill is the hero here; he's shown wrestling with doubts and political strife before taking his famous "We shall fight" stand. No notable female characters or diversity.
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Parents Need to Know
Parents need to know that Darkest Hour is set during an extremely stressful time in British history: when the Nazis were at their most powerful, rolling through Europe and threatening the United Kingdom's very existence. It focuses on Winston Churchill's (Gary Oldman) role in that military reality and the courage he found to stand by his core beliefs against all odds. Although it's set during wartime, no violence is shown beyond a bit of blood on injured soldiers (a bomb falls on soldiers, but we don't see it on-screen). In fact, rather than action and battle, the film offers lots of talk and political maneuvering, so younger viewers might have trouble sticking with it. There's also some drinking and quite a bit of smoking, which is accurate for the era. To stay in the loop on more movies like this, you can sign up for weekly Family Movie Night emails.
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Darkest Hour
Parent and Kid Reviews
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- Parents say (10)
- Kids say (21)
age 12+
Based on 10 parent reviews
KTJM Adult
June 27, 2022
age 12+
Absorbing atmospheric slice of history
So good to see a movie that does not have blood spilling from every body shown on screen, no explosions, swearing or semi clad women or pumped up males You might have to explain the history but there is ample to learn and watch and engage in rather than the usual hypnotic mindless garbage. Worth a look as the direction, production and lighting is fabulous , historical accuracy is of course truncated as it is a film but a lot there to consider and explore. Acting superb.
OliviaReviewsIt Adult
May 4, 2021
age 12+
WWII Era Gives Glimpse into Daily Life of Winston Churchill
"Darkest Hour" is the story of Winston Churchill becoming prime minster during World War II and his struggle not only against the swiftly approaching German army, but also his political opponents in parliament. This movie gives a look into Churchill's daily life as prime minister including his home life, his meetings with the King of England, and his motivation to write his powerful speeches. This movie is likely to appeal to an audience with an interest in WWII or British history but few outside of that audience due to its slow pacing. There's some mild language in this movie and a couple shots of German airplanes dropping bombs from the air. There is a lot of smoking in this movie. Positive messaging remains throughout this film--the idea that one must stand up for what's right even if it means losing everything one has--because freedom is worth that risk.
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See all 10 parent reviews
What's the Story?
As the Nazis rampage through Europe in DARKEST HOUR, England's political turmoil pushes the controversial, iconoclastic Winston Churchill (Gary Oldman) to the nation's top political post. His reign as prime minister is dominated by an existential dilemma: Should the vastly outgunned UK fight it out or surrender to the Germans -- saving lives and hoping for the best? His position hanging by a thread, the new leader must make perhaps the most momentous decision in British history, with the clock to invasion ticking down.
Is It Any Good?
Our review:
Parents say (10):
Kids say (21):
Joe Wright's drama features a transformative turn by the excellent Gary Oldman as Churchill; unfortunately, the limited-scope biopic doesn't have much more in its arsenal than that. The cast of Darkest Hour is excellent, but the inner workings and relationships of the people they play are unexplored, giving the actors little chance to shine. The film recounts a key moment in British, European, and world history: Churchill's choice to resist the superior Axis forces to the end, rather than surrender (expressed in his famous "We shall fight" speech). But instead of filling the film with tension and desperation, Wright and screenwriter Anthony McCarten (The Theory of Everything) focus on destructive political struggles. Keeping the focus on the back-and-forth in Parliament and the king's slowly won approval distances viewers from the actual stakes. It feels as if the movie is about Churchill's political life, rather than the survival of the British civilization and its people. For instance, the desperate, Hail Mary evacuation of Dunkirk is a key plot point ... but it's represented in the film by gentlemanly politicians civilly (mostly) debating the options. It's perhaps an unfair comparison, but Christopher Nolan's Dunkirk showed just how gripping that story could be. Not that Darkest Hour should have been a war film, but the audience does need to feel the weight that's bowing Churchill's back, not just be told about it.
The film commits the familiar sin of relating history almost exclusively through the mouths of the powerful. There's Neville Chamberlain (Ronald Pickup), upon whom history hasn't smiled; lesser-known Viscount Halifax (the always-great Stephen Dillane); and King George VI himself (Emmy winner Ben Mendelsohn). There's a nice secretary (Lily James), but her story isn't explored, and the way her relationship with Churchill is portrayed here pales in comparison to a parallel arc between another secretary and Churchill in Netflix's The Crown. It's only toward the end of Darkest Hour that we're reminded there are actual people among the "British people." In what will surely become the movie's signature scene, Churchill unexpectedly consults/manipulates average citizens on the dire question facing the nation. It's only then that we're reminded what stands to be lost, destroyed, killed. As for Oldman, he's dependably watchable. (Read: He's less fun to watch than you'd expect.) The script simply doesn't help him; Churchill's famed wit is barely present. Bottom line? Darkest Hour is a patriotic, if too genteel, representation of the events leading to one of the most famous speeches of the 20th century.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about what kind of movie Darkest Hour is: a war movie, a biopic, a historical document, a personal drama? Who do you think it's intended to appeal to?
Is this how you imagined Winston Churchill? How does he exhibit courage? Why is that an important character strength?
How did the film affect your view of Churchill? Facing the same odds, in that same situation, what choice do you think you'd have made?
How does the film depict drinking and smoking? Does the era a movie is set in affect how you view these things?
How accurate do you think the movie is? Why might filmmakers choose to alter the facts in a story that's based on true events?
Movie Details
- In theaters: November 22, 2017
- On DVD or streaming: February 27, 2018
- Cast: Gary Oldman, Lily James, Ben Mendelsohn
- Director: Joe Wright
- Inclusion Information: Female actors
- Studio: Focus Features
- Genre: Drama
- Topics: History
- Character Strengths: Courage
- Run time: 114 minutes
- MPAA rating: PG-13
- MPAA explanation: some thematic material
- Awards: Academy Award, Golden Globe - Golden Globe Award Winner
- Last updated: June 20, 2024
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Darkest Hour
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