Unlucky assassin Ladybug is determined to do his job peacefully after one too many gigs gone off the rails. Fate, however, may have other plans, as Ladybug's latest mission puts him on a collision course with lethal adversaries from around the globe—all with connected, yet conflicting, objectives—on the world's fastest train.
This movie contains 44 potentially triggering events.
Someone has emotionally neglected their children their entire lives and even has one of them (now a young adult) KILLED in the course of the movie's events. The parent explains the murder by saying that the child was a no-good douchebag or something like that. A parent couldn't possibly be less loving and caring towards their children than this person, and on top of that, the person is an overtly sadistic and homicidal super-criminal, so obviously the children are psychologically damaged.
Hmm... We see hitmen overtly forgiving other hitmen for shooting them and the like, which is why I'm answering Yes, just to be on the safe side. But one person who we know has suffered prolonged emotional neglect (at the least) has soooo NOT forgiven the person who neglected them. Quite the opposite: The neglected person is out for hardcore revenge.
Not in the "romantically" or sexually motivated way (like ex-boyfriends or -girlfriends, classic serial killers and so on). It's for money, revenge and so on. Action movie stuff.
I 100% agree with this. The Prince doesn’t fully gaslight people. They just manipulate people if that makes since. They just lie to other characters in the movie in hopes of manipulating them.
A snake bites a man in a comedic manner. He wraps the snake up in an item of clothing and stuffs it down a train toilet and closes the lid. The snake is seen safely leaving the train at the end of the film, seemingly unfazed. Being a train toilet, it is unlikely there was water in the bowl, so the snake will have remained dry.
No - people are intimidated and controlled through violence, but not what I'd call bullied. We see only fully adult, more or less hardcore criminals intentionally hurting anyone physically in this movie (and the victims are criminals themselves).
During a flash back, two people are seen cutting up bodies with chainsaws and placing the parts in barrels. Mostly offscreen, however blood does splatter against a characters face.
In a flashback, a person can be seen burning due to an exploded car. It is very hard to spot, zoomed out, only on screen for around 2 seconds, and took me about 7 rewatches to see it, but its there.
I'm not sure if anyone breaks a bone in the typical sense, but we see body parts being and having been severed in a flashback of dead bodies being dismembered with a circular saw.
At the end of the movie two people fall out of a train into water but are later seen to have survived.
It is also mentioned that a kid jumped off a roof but survived as well.
Yes, more than once. At least one person dies from being pierced with a knife (a HUGE knife to the heart); there's focus on him dying, as it's a slow-paced two-person scene. Actually, that particular instance isn't a normal stabbing; it's a knife that goes flying through the air accidentally during a fight... Anyway, as far as I remember, the other instances take place during fast-paced fight scenes - but I may be mistaken.
Piles of people die, often violently. Two assassins recount murdering people. There are several gun fights with mass casualties. A venemous snake kills people.
One sibling of two dies (murdered off screen, seen dead many times), and later the other sibling dies, too (hit by a truck on screen, not seen dead); they're both young adults. Neither of them is mourned by anyone. --- One mother/wife died in the past, murdered off screen. We see her, her husband and her little boy in flashbacks; they were a loving family. I'm not sure we see her son's reaction to her death, but we do see her husband finding her murdered and reacting with great pain, and many years later, in the movie's present, he still mourns her. --- Another mother/wife, this one with teenaged children, also died in the past, in a planned homicidal car collision. We see it happen on screen (from a distance, not graphic), but we don't see her dead. I don't think we see anyone's reactions to her death at the time, but her husband says matter-of-factly in the present that he loved her. --- One father of adult children dies violently on screen in the present; no one mourns him, since he's an evil psychopathic bastard.
The loving mother of a little boy was killed in the past; we see her alive, and we see her dead body - both in flashbacks - but we don't see her die. --- The mother of two older children died in a car crash in the past; we see it happen in a flashback (not graphic). --- The 50-something father of two young adult children dies on screen, very violently. One of his children was killed shortly before him, and one - who just tried to kill the father - dies a few moments after him. He was NOT a good father, but a ruthless, sadistic super criminal with absolutely no love for his children. --- There are no feeble/hurt/sick/dying/"fading" old people in the movie.
42:36 - 42:39 Flashback 1 Before the scene he says “Now get this, the kid was poisoned in the same way that El Sahara was …” look away
55:02 - 55:08 Flashback 2 The person in the phone says “Fun fact: the same poison that was used on…” look away
1:10:59 - 1:11:04 Final Flashback Ladybug is looking at a picture of the hornet. As soon as the camera goes back to ladybug from the picture of the hornet , look away
Hopefully these are helpful for all of you. I love this movie and think it’s worth the watch if you can get by these parts.
No, but in the last scene someone (jokingly?) says he needs to get to a loo very soon, because he's "ballpointing". :D There's some lighthearted poo and loo talk about that earlier in the movie; it's a little bit toilet-fixated.
One character criticizes another violent character's actions by calling her narcissistic and tells her to read a book related to BPD, but it's unclear if she's actually mentally ill
Not abuse, no. One character is obsessed with Thomas the tank engine and says he helped him learn to read people, and other characters make fun of him and are annoyed by it occasionally
A man tries to commit suicide by jumping off a tall building. He lands on Brad Pitt's car still alive so he takes him to hospital. Only a few second flashback and not relevant to the film.
A man tries to commit suicide by jumping off a tall building. He lands on Brad Pitt's car still alive so he takes him to hospital. Only a few second flashback and not relevant to the film.
No but someone jumps off a building with that intention in a flashback, they survive. Also, a few times people point guns at their heads but do not intend to shoot.
One character criticizes another by calling her narcissistic and tells her to read a book related to BPD, but it comes from a place of genuine recommendation as he frequently encourages others to better themselves. However, could be seen as an ableist joke
A character mentions giving someone the correct dosage of sleeping powder. Later in the film, the character is administering the sleeping powder and pours some of the vial, looks at another character’s physique and then adds the rest of the vial.
in the very brief sex scene it can be presumed that the two people involved have a large age gap. one being a younger woman and the other an older male politician
Brad Pitt cries and is emotional at the end once everything is over and it is pointed out. He is asked if he has hit his head but it is said to be because it is out of character for him to be emotional and not because "men shouldn't cry"
No. However, there can still be triggers. A boy is in coma in hospital after a fall from a building, and no one knows if he'll ever wake up. If we didn't know what had happened to him, he might just as well be a person dying from an illness, because what we see is an intubated, unresponsive person in a hospital bed. Now that I think about it, we actually don't know from the start why he's in the state he's in. We see his sad and worried father visiting him before we're informed; I think it's in the very first scene.
That would depend to some extent on how you view one of the characters, who dies towards the very end. It's a "bad guy" (very bad), but also someone whose very understandable emotional pain we've seen. Plus it's a very young person, only just an adult. However, the movie clearly doesn't want us to feel sad about the death.