There's a scene about 5 minutes in where a kid, the protagonist?, feeds a pet hamster one of their mom's anti-depressants, or spikes their food with it.
Yes I'm sure it's not real but it looks real enough. Right then and there is when I stopped caring, about the kid and the film, so I turned it off. I've seen animals treated poorly in films before but this film is only from 2017. Why is this still happening?
There are other, smarter ways to get your point across. Animals aren't props. Do better.
(One star given for the cast list which is the reason I was going to watch.)
Yes I'm sure it's not real but it looks real enough. Right then and there is when I stopped caring, about the kid and the film, so I turned it off. I've seen animals treated poorly in films before but this film is only from 2017. Why is this still happening?
There are other, smarter ways to get your point across. Animals aren't props. Do better.
(One star given for the cast list which is the reason I was going to watch.)