Lockout parents guide

Lockout Parent Guide

In actuality, the only benefit offered by this film is its short running time.

Overall D

In a futuristic world, a convicted criminal (Guy Pearce) is offered a chance at his freedom if he can break into a high-tech space prison that has been taken over by its inmates and rescue the President's daughter (Maggie Grace) who is visiting the facility.

Release date April 13, 2012

Violence D
Sexual Content B-
Profanity D+
Substance Use C-

Why is Lockout rated PG-13? The MPAA rated Lockout PG-13 for intense sequences of violence and action, and language including some James Mather | Stephen St. Legersexual references.

Run Time: 95 minutes

Official Movie Site

Parent Movie Review

Late in the 21st Century the United States has supposedly figured out the ultimate money making tool. Called MS1, it’s a jail in space where countries all over the world can rent a place to house their most dangerous criminals. With a half million nasty convicts on board, all kept in a comatose state, it appears to be the perfect landlord opportunity and security solution. That is until Emilie (Maggie Grace), the American President’s daughter, becomes convinced a major investor in the prison operation is using the inmates as space research guinea pigs.

Embarking on a humanitarian mission to check out the situation for herself, Emily’s arrival sets off a series of events that result in an unexpected awakening of the incarcerated population. When the guards prove helpless to contain the rioters, officials are forced to turn to the only man capable of saving the girl: Another criminal named Snow (Guy Pearce) who has just been sentenced to MS1 himself for conspiracy against the government.

Brimming with ferocious action that features shootings, stabbings, and torture, this film will likely have parents scratching their heads in wonder about movie ratings in the U.S. And the violence is only half the story (well… perhaps it is literally all the story…). Profanities are heard throughout, including a sexual expletive, various scatological remarks and terms of Christian deity. There are sexual comments and innuendo as well. Add to this a questionable hero character (who is a chain-smoker) and the final product hardly seems appropriate for a PG-13 audience.

But those are not the only reasons teens and adults would be better off saving their money. In actuality, the only benefit offered by this film is its short running time. Along with assaulting your ears with a pounding overwrought score, the movie also touts a protagonist who cracks jokes just long enough to run out of time before the bad guys arrive and a predictable script that ignores basic science (like the law of gravity). My verdict for this painful production is to lock it up and throw the keys away.

Directed by James Mather, Stephen St. Leger. Starring Guy Pearce, Maggie Grace, Peter Stormare, Joseph Gilgun. Running time: 95 minutes. Theatrical release April 13, 2012. Updated

Lockout
Rating & Content Info

Why is Lockout rated PG-13? Lockout is rated PG-13 by the MPAA for intense sequences of violence and action, and language including some James Mather | Stephen St. Legersexual references.

Violence: Pervasive violence throughout that at times becomes explicit. Countless characters are killed by shootings, stabbings, explosions and various other means. Characters are tortured with burns. Female characters are hit and attacked by men, one is killed at point blank range, as are other male characters. A cadaver is seen in a lab environment with the top of its skull removed. A man’s head is blown off after an explosive charge is placed around his neck—we see his body minus his head from the rear. A man commits suicide and shoots himself in the head. A man is ejected from the ship into space.

Sexual Content: Sexual remarks and innuendo are heard. A man, with what appears to be sexual motivation, begins attacking a woman but is interrupted.

Language: Obscenities heard throughout, include a single sexual expletive, various scatological terms, names of Christian deity, other moderate and mild profanities, and a crude anatomical term.

Drug/Alcohol Use: A hero character smokes throughout the film. Mention is made that hardly anyone still smokes in this futuristic society.

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Lockout Parents' Guide

Is keeping a prison space ship an economically viable proposal? In 2009 in California, the cost to keep an inmate in prison for one year was roughly $47,000. With the ship’s supposed 500,000 inmates, that equals $23.5 billion per year (assuming the cost would equal that of a Earth based prison). The total cost to date for the International Space Station is $150 billion (including Space Shuttle flights) and it accommodates a maximum crew of 7… although they aren’t put to sleep for their entire stay.

Why do movie scripts often rely on convicts and ne’er-do-wells to save the world? What does this say about our perceived attitudes toward government law enforcement?

Home Video

The most recent home video release of Lockout movie is July 17, 2012. Here are some details…

Home Video Notes: Lockout

Release Date: 17 July 2012

Lockout is releasing to home video (Blu-ray/DVD/UV Digital Copy) in an Unrated version. The package includes:

- Breaking into Lockout

- A Vision of the Future: Production Design and Special Effects

Related home video titles:

This movie comes from the same producers as the film Taken, which also starred Maggie Grace playing another daughter in distress. Guy Pearce can be seen in The King’s Speech and The Count of Monte Cristo.