A fish is shown to have several smaller fish in its mouth and it lets them out when a sea monster questions it. Sea monsters transform to human form in several scenes and we see them losing their scales, fins and tails in exchange for skin and hair and the change reverses when they get wet. ► A young sea monster yells and flails on a beach after another sea monster in human form pulls him out of the water and he transforms into human form he stumbles and falls a few times before he learns how to walk on land. An angler fish pops out of the shadows and we see that his flesh is transparent revealing his organs he gasps and a sea monster tells his son to punch the fish in the heart, which he does and the fish revives (the fish also has eyes that move independently and pointed teeth). A young sea monster panics when something wearing a deep-sea diver suit and carrying a harpoon moves toward him underwater. A young sea monster takes a flock of fish to a patch of green where they graze until he sees a boat on the surface and scrambles to take them to cover under a rock (they are not seen). ► A young sea monster panics when his flock of fish is gone from their holding place and he yells, “Fish out of the barn” as he searches for them and returns them to their safe place. A young sea monster in human form calls a young man a “bottom feeder” and describes his mustache as “two sad side whiskers.” A young man mocks a girl and calls her “Spewlia” (her name is Julia). A young man threatens a sea monster in human form and draws his hand across his throat. ► A young man ridicules a girl about a race she participated in where she “couldn’t stop throwing up” he later makes similar references and gestures with his hand as he makes retching sounds (we do not see any vomit). A young man speeds past a girl on a bicycle and hits her on the back of the head he later kicks other riders off their bikes as he passes. A young man pulls a girl’s hat down over her eyes and steals her money. A young man tells other young men to push or hit two sea monsters in human form. Two sea monsters in human form push several children into water, spray them with water and drop water balloons on them trying to find their son. A sea monster in human form attacks her husband (in human form) and slaps him repeatedly before realizing who he is. Two young men grab a sea monster in human form and another young man punches him in the stomach, until another sea monster in human form holds a harpoon toward him and the two sea monsters run away. A young man pushes a young sea monster in human form toward a fountain and the boy’s flesh turns blue when he is splashed with water (no one sees this). ► A young man on a bike chases a young sea monster on another bike and throws a harpoon at him (he is not struck), the young man knocks a girl off her bike and she seems injured as two sea monsters help her up. Two sea monsters are trapped in the rain and people see them in their natural form several people approach them with harpoons and threaten them (they do not hurt them). A sea monster stands just off a beach and when he is spotted by people with harpoons he swims away as they throw the harpoons at him (he is not harmed). ► Two fishermen on a boat at night talk about stories of sea monsters in the area as something moves through the water around their boat and takes items off the deck when the creature gets caught in a net, it breaks away and is spotted by the fishermen that throw a harpoon at it but it is not hurt. – Sea monsters have glowing green eyes, long tails, small fins where their ears would be and scale-covered hands. – A girl hugs two sea monsters in their natural form and in human form a couple of times. Several lines of dialogue are spoken in Italian without translation. Also with the voices of Jack Dylan Grazer, Sacha Baron Cohen, Maya Rudolph, Giacomo Gianniotti, Jim Gaffigan, Sandy Martin, Emma Berman, Francesca Fanti, Gino D’Acampo, Deyvi Stib Rodríguez, Marco Barricelli and Saverio Raimondo. Read our parents’ guide below for details on sexual content, violence & strong language.Īnimated feature about a young sea monster (voiced by Jacob Tremblay) anxious to find his place in a world, beyond his watery home. Why is “Luca” rated PG? The MPAA rating has been assigned for “rude humor, language, some thematic elements and brief violence.” The evaluation includes many encounters with sea monsters, sea monsters transforming to human form, near attacks by humans on sea monsters using harpoons, risky behavior, and some mild language and name-calling.
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