Stoker why rated r




















We see a woman crying at a funeral and a teen girl sitting next to her and it is implied that the woman is crying for her dead husband. A man is visibly upset by his brother's presence when he sees him in a room in a mental hospital. A teen girl shrinks away from her mother's touch. We see a bloody drag mark on the floor through a house. A teen girl lies on the ground over a fresh grave and it is implied that she hears a cell phone the dead person's phone coming from the grave.

A woman asks a teen girl if she is feeling okay, saying the girl is "white as a sheet" and the girl replies flippantly, "My father is dead. A teen girl makes a vague reference to her father dying in a car accident. A police officer asks a teen girl if she had seen a teen boy who was reported missing. We see an older woman and man separately watching a nature documentary where we see an eagle scoop a fish from the water; we also see an eagle pulling bloody guts and sinew from an animal's corpse.

We see multiple stuffed bird carcasses throughout the movie as decoration in a home and a woman refers to taxidermy, saying her daughter had killed the birds. A teen girl pops a blister on her foot; we see a small piece of wood entering the blister and clear fluid pouring from it. An older woman acts disgusted by the condition of a hotel room; she looks around at the bed, pulling back the sheets and acting disgusted, and then looks at a hair-covered piece of soap.

Run Time: 98 minutes Official Movie Site. Please Note: We have not viewed this movie. The information below is a summary based on data gathered from government and industry sponsored film classification agencies in various global regions.

Home Video The most recent home video release of Stoker movie is June 18, Maybe it's both. As is almost always the case with stories such as this, the horny guy with a crush doesn't know when to stop, the cops are slow on the uptake, and the neighbors are invisible no matter what's happening inside the house.

What sets "Stoker" apart are the exquisitely grotesque bursts of death, which usually occur only after an effectively maddening series of tension-building scenes.

Kidman, at least partially free of the constraints of whatever modern medical face-freezing tricks she's been employing to stave off the natural aging process, is wonderful playing a character who could have been written by Tennessee Williams.

Wasikowska is more effective as the mousy India first finding her way than as the person who India becomes. As for Matthew Goode, I remember seeing him opposite Joseph Gordon-Levitt in "Lookout," one of the best movies of , and thinking him capable of winning an Oscar someday.

This won't be the role, because a film like "Stoker" will be long-forgotten come nomination season, but it won't be for lack of talent. This guy can bring it. Rated R for disturbing violent and sexual content. Nicole Kidman as Evie. Dermot Mulroney as Richard. Matthew Goode as Uncle Charlie. Mia Wasikowska as India Stoker. Harmony Korine as Mr.



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