One of the children (around age 13) is attacked by an alien and some sort of limb gets shoved into their mouth. The children all agree that the alien limb shoved into their companion’s mouth was the alien’s p***s.
Children are dropped off at a summer camp. One of the children has fled to America from Shanghai, where she said that her father had wanted a son (that is all the information we get).
In the beginning of the movie, there are two camp counselors speaking to each other. One asks the other why they are talking like they’re from the 1980s, and the other says it is because “they” want them to.
Depends on your definition, but mental/emotional abuse from camp personnel could easily be argued. Also, the Chinese girl goes to great lengths to get to the camp, including smuggling herself into the country, based on an advertisement that she picked up somewhere. When asked, she replies, "let's just say my parents wanted a boy".
At some point there is a loud bang and you can hear a cat squeal. The cat is never seen and there are no implications that it did not make it... It could've just been scared by the loud noise.
No, but there are some similar offenses. The movie beings with a pan through a bullet hole in the head of an astronaut. At least one person is decapitated by an alien. In another scene, an alien stabs a fingers into someone's mouth and drags them offscreen; their face bulges strangely.
The kids share beds in one scene and there is a big hullabaloo about who will share with the girl, including talk about being a virgin, cock-blocking, etc. Earlier in the movie, a character misinterprets a request to "take it (his cell phone) out and put it in my box (literal)". The joke is emphasized.
An alien is lured into a pool, where it drowns; however, it later re-emerges because it can regenerate. (Not going to pretend this really makes sense, that's just what happened.)
A nuke is set off in the atmosphere, causing an EMP. It also makes the rest of the movie yellow, idk. No damage from the nuke aside from the EMP and the explosion, itself, is not emphasized.