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THE CROW (2024)

What You Need To Know:

THE CROW (2024) is a reboot of a 1994 movie about a supernatural avenger who rises from the grave to get justice for him and his soul mate. In the new movie, a young woman is running from an evil man named Vincent who sold his soul to the Devil for immortality. Vincent has agreed to provide candidates for Hell by corrupting young people. Shelly finds refuge in an isolated facility for troubled delinquents. There, she falls in love with a tattooed inmate named Eric. However, Vincent’s minions track her down. Shelly and Eric escape, but Vincent tracks them down and kills them. Eric rises from the grave to exact revenge and redeem Shelly’s life.

THE CROW is a paint-by-numbers revenge thriller with flashes of gothic horror. It has a strong pagan worldview containing false religion and occult elements. These are mixed with some Christian allusions and symbols and Romantic, Christian notions of innocence and sacrificial love. THE CROW also has lots of strong foul language, brief sexual immorality, and some of the most brutal violence MOVIEGUIDE® has ever seen.

Content:

(PaPa, FRFR, OO, C, B, Ro, LLL, VVV, SS, NN, AA, DD, MM):

Dominant Worldview and Other Worldview Content/Elements:
Strong pagan worldview with strong false religion/theology and strong occult elements but mixed with some Christian and moral elements, including some Christian symbols and metaphors in a dark battle against demonic evil, which posits a world where, sometimes, a dead person with intense feelings of love for another person or other people who died can return to life and set things right in a story about an evil man has made a pact with the Devil and has killed a young man’s “soul mate” lover, young man returns to life to obtain justice for his lover and save them both from Hell and movie creates sympathy for the hero to defeat the evil villain and save his lover, but something goes wrong and the young man is doomed to never to rejoin his lover after she resurrects, and so he sacrifices himself to be doomed to save her, but he still hopes that one day they will reunite in Heaven or the Afterlife, plus there are some Romantic notions about innocence and love mixed in within the movie’s worldview content;

Foul Language:
At least 39 obscenities (including many “f” words) and one strong profanity using the name of Jesus;

Violence:
Lots of extreme violence (among the most brutal we’ve ever seen at MOVIEGUIDE® in its history), and some strong violence includes two young lovers are captured and suffocated to death using two plastic bags in pretty graphic scene, and the title character shoots many bad guys to death in brutal ways, the most brutal such deaths occur in lengthy battle in lobby of opera house while opera is performed with the title character comes back to life and can’t be killed, stabbing many bad guys to death with a samurai sword and shooting bad guys in brutal ways including inserting the sword into one bad guy’s mouth and splitting another guy’s head, bad guys shoot the title character multiple times but he can’t be killed though he often stumbles and falls then rises again, bad guy stabs the title character through the chest with the character’s own sword, but the title character survives, title character breaks arms and legs of some bad guys during all the fighting, bad guy shoots a friend of the title character’s through the head, brutal fight between the title character and the main villain, people descend downward into deep water that in a symbolic way is supposed to lead them to Hell, main villain has made a deal with Satan to send “innocent” victims to Hell so the villain could live forever, one scene show the main villain whispering to a young woman and making her brutally kill another young woman (that’s how the villain allegedly makes the “innocent” girls he entices fit for Hell);

Sex:
Depicted scene of fornication in two shots, and an example of implied fornication;

Nudity:
Rear male nudity during sex, and some images of upper male nudity;

Smoking and/or Drug Use and Abuse:
No tobacco use but two scenes of apparent marijuana smoking, and a scene where a young man and woman take an illicit pill of some kind; and,

Miscellaneous Immorality:
Villain made a pact with the Devil, villain commands a criminal enterprise, villain deceives young people to corrupt them and gain new victims for Satan.

More Detail:

THE CROW (2024) is a reboot of a 1994 movie about a supernatural avenger who rises from the grave to get justice for him and his soul mate who were murdered by an evil man who’s made a deal with the Devil to corrupt innocent souls and send them to Hell. Based on a comic book series created in 1989, THE CROW has a strong, slightly mixed pagan worldview with false theology and occult themes combined with some light Christian, moral content, lots of strong foul language, some sexual immorality, and some of the most extreme and brutal violence MOVIEGUIDE® has ever seen in a movie.

The movie begins with a young woman named Shelly running from the henchman of an evil man named Vincent. Vincent has made a deal with the Devil to corrupt the souls of innocent young people and send them to Hell, in exchange for immortality. Vincent prefers young women, especially budding musical artists.

Shelly finds refuge in an isolated facility for juvenile delinquents, where she falls in love with a tattooed young man named Eric. However, Vincent’s minions, with help from Shelly’s corrupt mother, find her location. So, Eric helps Shelly escape the facility. Sadly, though, Vincent is able to finally track them down, and his men suffocate Eric and Shelly to death with plastic bags in a disturbing scene of murder.

Eric imagines Shelly and him falling downward to the bottom of the ocean. However, he suddenly wakes up in a railyard surrounded by crows. A mysterious older man tells Eric that, when a person dies, sometimes something so bad happens that your soul “cannot rest until you put the wrong things right.”

Eric vows to kill all the people who took part in Shelly’s murder. The older man promises that, if Eric keeps his love for Shelly “pure,” they can both return from the dead.

A violent battle between Eric and Vincent’s forces ensues on the streets of New York, culminating in an opera house and at Vincent’s country estate.

THE CROW is a paint-by-numbers revenge thriller with flashes of gothic horror. It has a strong pagan worldview containing false religion and occult elements. These are mixed with some Christian allusions and symbols and Romantic, Christian notions of innocence and sacrificial love. THE CROW also has lots of strong foul language, brief sexual immorality, and some of the most extreme and brutal violence MOVIEGUIDE® has ever seen in a movie.