
They throw a drinking party and there are a lot of high schoolers but you're kids aren't going to see that and be like, "Wow maybe I should do that in high school!" You may think you're kids are irresponsible sometimes but they aren't dumb. Drinking and Drugs are really basic also. Yes, they talk about it but other then like not even a full second of them walking in on 3 people in a bedroom there isn't really anything. Other than a split second of partial nudity there aren't any sex scenes. In a comedic way they show it lying on the ground but it's super fake and it's all a joke. Or when the gym teacher is shot on the penis and it falls off. Like when Johnny Depp is shot and tells his friend about all his regrets as he dies. When there is really any form of violence it used in a comedic way. I know my kids know about sexual information from friends and I hate to say it but most kids who are way to young to know so much know all of the information about sex. The swearing, many f-bombs sometimes used in sexual concepts but most kids know what that means already whether you like it or not kids learn about this stuff from friends or school. Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum had an amazing performance playing idiot cops trying to fit in as teenagers at a high school. Melding truth and fantasy, Paper Heart uses equal parts comedy and realism to resolve the ultimate question of whether love is fact or fiction.Now, this movie is one of my favorites. This portion of the film is all narrative, and was written into the script, but also as part of the documentary, Yi travels the country interviewing various people about their opinions and experiences with love, and these portions of the film are real - the interviewees are not actors. As part of her participation in the project, she has a film crew follow her around throughout every new development in her love life - which gets complicated when she starts dating fellow comedian Cera. In the movie, Yi has agreed to be the subject of a documentary about her quest to discover if love really exists, since she's never experienced it. Playing themselves, Yi and Cera embark on a scripted version of their own story. Real-life sweethearts Michael Cera and Charlyne Yi star in a fictionalized version of their romance in this indie semi-documentary comedy, written by Yi.
