But it’s at 10% at rottentomatoes. And even the good review, which was giving a hometown discount since it’s a Boston website reviewing a movie set in Boston, couldn’t give it more praise than this:
Now how to break her little heart? On her birthday no less?
Tell her you’ve heard it is not a good movie. Show her evidence that supports what you’ve heard. Then ask if she still wants to go, and take her if she says yes.
Why is this even a question? Your daughter wants to see a particular movie on her birthday, just take her to the damned movie she wants to see! I don’t understand why you’d want to convince her otherwise.
Look her in the eyes, realize that in a few years you will suddenly become The Old Thing that Won’t Go Away, take her to the movie, suffer through it, see her smile, appreciate that she wants to be seen in public with you.
Oh my, yes. The ‘appreciate that she wants to be seen in public with you’ part is very important to remember (good call, Death of Rats). Imagine how much fun it will be if she thinks the movie is silly/bad but great because she and her parent both think the movie is silly/bad. You can come out of the experience with inside catch phrases that can last for years.
Children are only their ages for a very short period of time. Cherish each stage as you will never experience them again.
Will this be the first or only bad movie you’ve ever seen?
If not, take her to the movie she wants to see. Maybe she’ll like it. Maybe she just has a crush on Ryan Reynolds, and will like anything he’s in.
Regardless, it’s her birthday and the best thing is to take her to the show she wants to see.
And don’t think I can’t understand or sympathize. My son wants to see Turbo, which looks like torture to me. But what the hey, he’s 9. I’ll probably take him, and share a large popcorn.
This, seriously. What part of “heard it’s not that great a movie” overrides “daughter’s birthday” in your mind? How many bad movies have you sat through for a first date? Were those people more important than your daughter?
This isn’t all she’s asking for on her birthday BTW, so it’s not like her day will be completely ruined if she misses the movie.
And I’m as much concerned that she’d be sad that she wasted 2 hours of her birthday watching a horrible movie as that she’d be sad that she didn’t get to see the movie.
This is my third daughter, so trust me, I’ve seen many, many movies that I didn’t want to see.
I think you nailed it here. Turn brain off, enjoy movie with things blowing up and people running around chasing each other and spending your daughter’s birthday with her.
ETA: How old is your daughter? If she really would be bummed at wasting two hours of her birthday, maybe send her to Rotten Tomatoes and let her make the choice herself. Then she only has herself to blame.