Parents' Guide to

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem

By Sandie Angulo Chen, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 8+

Clever, tween-friendly animated reboot has action violence.

Movie PG 2023 99 minutes
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem Movie Poster: Michelangelo rides a skateboard with the movie's title on the underside, while the other turtles are shown underneath

A Lot or a Little?

What you willā€”and won'tā€”find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 11+

Based on 67 parent reviews

age 12+

Black male character gets eliminated

The main antagonist is a large black male character with an Afro who is upset because his kind has been poorly treated and not accepted. He is shown as a pretty one dimensional character and the big celebration is that he is killed or at least eliminated. This is really upsetting and reinforces the already prevalent idea of violence against black men. I am really disappointed this is a Common Sense selection and got 4 stars.
age 13+

How does this have a ā€œfamilyā€ badge??

We left after ten minutes. Even our seven year old said that it wasnā€™t appropriate. Kind of shocked this had a common sense family badge on it. This is about the third recent review from this site that we completely disagree with.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (67 ):
Kids say (30 ):

This irresistibly crowd-pleasing reboot is a fun, funny adventure with distinctive animation, enthusiastic voice acting, and a memorable soundtrack. Screenwriters Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, Jeff Rowe, Dan Hernandez, and Benji Samit have impressively captured how 15-year-old boys talk, tease, and act in Mutant Mayhem's screenplay. A few scenes of the turtles egging one another on will ring especially true to many teens (and parents). And Edebiri is a wonderful new April. She's smart, observant, and determined -- and she's not sexualized, unlike many live-action versions of the character. Chan is ideally cast as Splinter, who's more father than sensei in this particular story but still knows how to show off his martial arts prowess. The performance continues to prove how adept Chan is with comic timing. Ice Cube's Superfly is a villain with an understandable hatred toward humans, and he adds some levity to the role in a way that renders him not quite as scary as other TMNT baddies.

In addition to the talented cast, the movie boasts a New York-centric hip-hop soundtrack that includes songs from De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Busta Rhymes, DMX, Gravediggaz, and Naughty by Nature. (Audiences of a certain age may walk out singing "Can I Kick It?") As with the Spider-Verse films, the animation here is vibrant and immersive, lovingly exploring city and mutant life. Director Jeff Rowe uses New York as another character in the film, both below and above ground. One of the movie's sweetest aspects is how much the turtles want to go to high school, even after April reveals how she's been bullied. They crave friendship and connection beyond their relatives, and it's a touching reminder that Leo, Donnie, Mikey, and Raph are still kids, making this an ideal feature-film version of TMNT for tweens -- but one that will still delight older moviegoers, too.

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