Common Sense Media Review
By Nell Minow , based on child development research. How do we rate?
age 17+
Shamelessly one-sided with cheesy wooden dialogue.
Parents Need to Know
Why Age 17+?
Any Positive Content?
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Language
a lot
Very strong language including racial epithets.
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Violence & Scariness
a lot
Intense peril and battle violence, many characters killed, brutal murders.
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Sex, Romance & Nudity
some
Non-sexual nudity.
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Parents Need to Know
Parents need to know that this movie has very strong language (including racial epithets), intense peril, execution of non-military citizens, and brutal battle violence. Many characters are wounded or killed. A woman is mutilated. To stay in the loop on more movies like this, you can sign up for weekly Family Movie Night emails.
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Tears of the Sun
Parent and Kid Reviews
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- Parents say (3)
- Kids say (4)
age 15+
Based on 3 parent reviews
Kulindu D. Adult
July 26, 2023
age 14+
Superb movie. Very emotional
Rmpshk Adult
January 27, 2019
age 17+
This is what they do
I rely on common sense media (CSM) for insight into movies' "appropriateness." CSM is usually very trustworthy. But in this case very far from the mark. Tears of the Sun is akin to hallowed classics such as platoon or full metal jacket. It displayed a level of shocking realism which, I believe, young people need to be aware of. Parents please watch with your young adult children. Men up against impossible odds, willing to give their lives to help the powerless and stop real dark and powerful forces. Great suffering, terrible pain, a willingness to sacrifice oneself for another. These are themes which can be difficult for young people to understand.
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See all 3 parent reviews
What's the Story?
In TEARS OF THE SUN, Bruce Willis plays Navy Lt. A.K. Waters, a guy who always completes his missions. His latest is the rescue of a gorgeous female doctor who runs a clinic in Nigeria that is in the path of rebel forces. For his own survival, Waters had shut down his emotions during this mission. But the beautiful doctor and the ravaged people taught him that what he should do is ignore his orders and put the lives of his men at risk. He and his men go into a town where the bad guys have killed almost everyone and just mow the bad guys down with machine guns. He puts his men at risk. Many are killed and the others are severely wounded.
Is It Any Good?
Our review:
Parents say (3):
Kids say (4):
This movie feels like a script written for John Wayne that someone finally got around to filming 40 years later without any sense that times have changed. There are some good action sequences, but it is filled with clichés, shamelessly one-sided, has cheesy wooden dialogue, and a numbingly predictable plot. Waters defies American diplomatic policy going back to the Monroe Doctrine, and the point of the movie seems to be that this is unqualifiedly a good thing and that it is the job of a Navy Lieutenant to determine what our foreign policy should be and then just carry it out. There is no sense of the complexity of American intervention into a tragic civil conflict and no sense of the consequences of his choices.
A.K. may have learned to care, but that does not appear to be true of Willis. He does all right with the weary, man-of-the-world, let-me-handle-this moments. But, for example, when he is called upon to give a stirring "be a man" pep talk to a shaken Nigerian who has just seen everyone he cares about killed, the best he can do is bark, "Cowboy the **** up!" Monica Bellucci may be as talented as her press reports claim, but there is no way to tell that from her kittenish performance here.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about how countries decide whether to intervene in other countries' fights. Does the movie intentionally comment on the current international situation? How well does or doesn't it make its case? Why did A.K. stop caring and when did he start again?
Movie Details
- In theaters: March 7, 2003
- On DVD or streaming: June 10, 2003
- Cast: Bruce Willis, Cole Hauser, Monica Bellucci
- Director: Antoine Fuqua
- Inclusion Information: Black directors, Female actors
- Studio: Columbia Tristar
- Genre: Action/Adventure
- Run time: 118 minutes
- MPAA rating: R
- MPAA explanation: strong war violence, some brutality and language
- Last updated: April 23, 2024
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Tears of the Sun
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