Parents' Guide to

The Greatest Showman

By Sandie Angulo Chen, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 10+

Jackman and Zendaya entertain in musical Barnum biopic.

Movie PG 2017 105 minutes
The Greatest Showman Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 8+

Based on 165 parent reviews

age 8+

Good movie, but please add beheading by guillotine to the voilence part. No blood and it's a trick, but it should be added as an trigger for some people. Also there's lots of body shaming. (fatphobia for example) Of course that's what the movie is about. Saying people are freaks because they aren't the norm might not be the perfect thing to tell kids.

Good movie, but please add beheading by guillotine to the voilence part. No blood and it's a trick, but it should be added as an trigger for some people. Also there's lots of body shaming. (fatphobia for example) Of course that's what the movie is about. Saying people are freaks because they aren't the norm might not be the perfect thing to tell kids.
age 13+

Disturbing

Great music and movie, up until the part where P.T Burnum has a “scandal” with the opera singer and gives her a kiss on stage. A MARRIED FAMILY MAN has a “thing” for the singer. It was so hard to explain this to my children, I just shut the movie off. Also a lot of drinking.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (165 ):
Kids say (319 ):

Exuberant performances propel this musical biopic, which isn't perfect but does occasionally delight thanks to its stellar cast, led by the inimitable Jackman. There's inherent value in watching the talented Jackman sing and dance, and he's an ideal fit for playing the titular "greatest showman" on earth. The Greatest Showman doesn't delve into some of the uglier aspects of Barnum's life (like all the hoaxes he was accused of committing), but it does manage to entertain audiences with catchy original songs by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, the award-winning lyricists for La La Land and the Tony-winning Broadway sensation Dear Evan Hansen.

The soundtrack is in many ways more remarkable than the movie itself, with showstopping anthems like Jackman's "The Greatest Show" and "A Million Dreams" and the romantic "Rewrite the Stars" -- a lovely duet by Efron and Zendaya. The songs will stay in your head long after the credits roll, but the plot is unevenly paced. It rushes through the buildup of the Barnums' love story and sugarcoats seedy 19th-century New York to the point that it's not really recognizable as Manhattan. It's best to appreciate the film as a flashy, colorful Broadway show, where the "book" is less important than the musical numbers.

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