Parents' Guide to

Black Widow

By Tara McNamara, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 12+

Strong women in ScarJo superhero film; violence, language.

Movie PG-13 2021 133 minutes
Black Widow Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you willā€”and won'tā€”find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 12+

Based on 43 parent reviews

age 14+

Great Flick, Not a 12+ Pick

Was a great film, but my 12 year old daughter would be very upset by the child trafficking and abuse scenes, which were quite vivid and intense. Parents of gentle-hearted children probably wouldn't pick a film for 12+ when it's rated as PG13 anyways.
age 12+

Great but common sense forgot a couple of things this is for a mature 12 yr old

Very good but common sense didnā€™t mention when they explained how one of the girls didnā€™t have a reproductive system and she said I donā€™t have get my period dipshit when her dad asked if it was THAT time of the month and she went into detail about how the place she used to work for took out all of her reproductive organs so she canā€™t have babies which I thought was very inappropriate there is also a lot of shit repeated on and on again damn, hell, ass, etc, I recommend this for a mature 12 yr old that can handle violence and language overall a very good plotline

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (43 ):
Kids say (156 ):

While it took far too long for Black Widow to get her own solo film, she puts her moment to good use, blowing up the patriarchy in epic style. What makes Black Widow (the character) unique among the Avengers is that she doesn't have superpowers or super tech: Her brain and her body combine to make her a lethal weapon. But as Natasha returns to her roots, we learn that she's actually not entirely unique: There's a whole widow program, with thousands of "graduates." Natasha has always been a mysterious figure, wracked with guilt from her unwitting work as an assassin for the Russian government. In Black Widow, the Iron Curtain is pulled back to reveal the people she grew up with and the trauma she endured. More than the tragedy of being programmed as a killer, the film's heart beats with the emotional weight of losing parents, more than once -- and wanting your family to be better. While many films deal with issues related to adoption, foster care, guardians, and abandonment, few of them do it with full sensitivity. This one does.

While the male Avengers are always giving one another a hard time and poking fun, no-nonsense Black Widow is usually left alone. Going home again means that Natasha finally gets some long overdue razzing -- and it's pure delight. It's also fair to say that the movie's costumes, hair, and makeup are more aligned with female sensibilities than fanboys': They're functionally stylish (Yelena's praise of pockets is on point), and you get the sense that they're dressing to impress themselves. Nothing low cut, no ridiculous lashes, and absolutely no high heels (note to Marvel merchandising: Those combat boots are everything). No question, this is Marvel's most feminist film to date, and it's a winner -- executed in a way that will leave men cheering just as women have been cheering the male Avengers and others for decades. The action sequences are mesmerizing, perhaps even more fascinating than a typical superhero film because Natasha and Yelena are purely physical fighters, not "powered." That may help make this a particularly meaningful film: Unlike other female superhero projects (Wonder Woman, Captain Marvel, WandaVision), Black Widow is about women who've become wonders and marvels thanks to their own cunning and strength.

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