Slappy and the Stinkers

 Review

Common Sense Media says

Potty humor, pratfalls as mischief-makers set sea lion free.
greenON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
yellowPAUSE: Know your child; some content
may not be right for some kids.
redOFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
not for kidsNOT FOR KIDS: Not appropriate for kids any age.

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Quality
 
Sometimes media can be age appropriate but a real waste of time. Our star rating assesses the media's overall quality.

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Parents say

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Kids say

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What parents need to know

Parents need to know that slapstick action and potty humor are the main sources of comedy in this movie about setting an aquarium sea lion free. The adults are all buffoons, created to be laughed at by the kids in the movie and by the audience. There are pratfalls galore: characters tumble, are upended, punched, teased, doused in paint, bird poop, peanut butter, and vomit. There are farts, potty smells, references to peeing, and use of laxatives. Younger kids may be frightened when Slappy the sea lion is captured by villains, chained, and briefly buzzed with an electric prod, though he is never in real danger and never hurt. Two school bullies tease the five young heroes, but there's no actual threat there either. A few mild swear words are heard ("hell," "crap," "farthead"). It's generally preposterous silliness. One adult character smokes.

  • Intended to entertain, not educate.
  • Advocates sensitivity and compassion for wild creatures, in this case a sea lion. There's value in teamwork.
  • All the grownups are one-dimensional and portrayed as bumbling, self-absorbed, or clueless. The kids are a stereotypically diverse mix of "fiesty girl," "the leader," "witty African-American," "asthmatic, but cute scared kid," and "problem-solver." The kids do work together with integrity to save an animal, defeat school bullies and an evil sea-lion-napper, and wreak havoc on the dim-witted school principal.
  • Clownish action from beginning to end. There are only two brief and perhaps disturbing scenes in which the villain tries to train a kidnapped sea lion by chaining him and using an electric prod. Otherwise there are no serious injuries and there is no actual suspense, just lots of slapstick action.
  • Not applicable.
  • Potty humor throughout includes: farting, mention of peeing and wetting pants, smelly poop references; characters get hit in the crotch numerous times; the seal lion accidentally eats an entire package of laxative after which the creature is seen on the toilet. Infrequent coarse language  including "hell," "pissant," "farthead," "crap."
  • Lots of products on display: Coca Cola, Morton Salt, Fizzie's, Sharper Image, Laidlaw buses, Johnson & Johnson, and Z LAX, Jr.
  • The sneering villain is a chain-smoker.

What's the story?

Five best friends -- enthusiastic nonconformists all -- meet Slappy, The Sea Lion, on a field trip. The "Stinkers," as they are called by the private school's disaster-prone headmaster (B.D. Wong) think that Slappy is unhappy in his small aquarium habitat. Remembering Free Willy, the five troublemakers determine that they, too, can make a heroic rescue and return Slappy to the ocean. Unbeknownst to them, however, an evil sea-lion-napper has other plans for the affable mammal. He, too, intends to steal Slappy, train him to do tricks, and then sell him to a circus. The rescuers confront the 'napper and the chase is on.


Is it any good?

 

Silly, mindless, often crude fun for those who like their humor on the broad side: clueless adults who fall and get  banged up a lot, ridiculous pie-in-the-face villains, and oh-so-cutesy kids who grin a lot and utter sassy wisecracks on cue.

Combined with an abundance of fart and poop jokes, it's juvenile humor at best -- a time-waster with a few good laughs and an engaging sea lion.


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What families can talk about

  • Families can talk about the difference between make-believe live action, animated action, and real action. Are any of the crashes, falls, hits, in this movie meant to be taken seriously? How can you tell?

  • The Stinkers had no adults that could be counted upon to help them. Does that feel like a real situation? If you need help, who can you count on?

  • Slappy tells the kids that he is happiest in his home at the aquarium. There is controversy about whether or not to keep wild things in captivity for education and/or entertainment. What do you think? How could you find out more about this subject?


This review was written by Renee Schonfeld

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This review was written by Renee Schonfeld
Topics:friendship, ocean creatures
Studio:TriStar Pictures
Director:Barnet Kellman
Cast:B.D. Wong, Bronson Pinchot, Jennifer Coolidge
Genre:Family and Kids
Run time:78 minutes
Theatrical release date:January 23, 1998
DVD release date:January 4, 2005
MPAA rating:PG
MPAA explanation:some crude behavior, mild language and slapstick violence

This review was written by Renee Schonfeld
 

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About our rating system
ON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
PAUSE: Know your child; some content may not be right for some kids.
OFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
Learning ratings
BEST: Really engaging, great learning approach.
GOOD: Pretty engaging, good learning approach.
FAIR: Somewhat engaging, OK learning approach.
NOT FOR LEARNING: Not recommended for learning.

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