Problem in Tipetill Review Film

Overview of a healthy reasonable medium

Jennifer Green

From Jennifer Green

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Based on the research of the development of the child. How do we rate?


Age 10+







The adventurous story with in charge of children has violence, bullying.

What is the story like?

Adult Title City in the problems on Tipetill are worried about the mischief of their children and decide to leave them for a day to teach them a lesson. But when they stick to the countryside, one day turns into several. Children go from frightened to empower because they care about each other and eventually take over the daily tasks of the city. One group of bad seeds decides to celebrate the lack of supervision by leaving the toy shop, taking over the city bar and a failed havoc in the lives of other children. Things become disordered when two kids groups are turned in the fight for determining who is in charge.

Is that good?

Our review:







Parents say :
Not yet rated

The children say:
Not yet rated

Based on a classic children’s book, the film lies somewhere between I’m home and Lord fly. Problem in Tepetill He was placed in an idyllic European hamlet in an unspecified last era when children had freedom (and lack of screens) to wander the streets together by making mischief and entertainment. Their communalism and inventiveness are delighted, and the film is at best when children gather to fill adult roles in the city, from cooking to delivering mail to recording and announce news.

Trouble There are some uneven patches, such as animation and special effects, and skips shows the key parts of adult adventure, which seems fully built to justify the children’s story (and stones of the legendary actor Gerard Depard). But the children’s thrower deals and fully embodies the idiosyncrasy of their individual characters. Views of good children versus bad children can feel a little too stereotypical, and some struggles are too high for young spectators, but Trouble is still fun and out of normal film.

Talk to your kids about …

  • Families can talk about the assumption The problem in Tipetill. Can you imagine all adults to leave a small town and leave children to take care of themselves? Should it be realistic? Why or why not?

  • Are “good” children always good? Did “bad” children show all redemption qualities?

  • Have you seen other movies or read other books in which children stayed in charge of themselves? How is this story comparing?

Did we miss something on diversity?

Research shows the connection between child’s healthy self-esteem and positive portraits in the media. That is why we added the “Different National Teams” section into our examinations that will overturn. You can help us to help children

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