Parents' Guide to

Halftime

Movie NR 2022 96 minutes
Halftime Movie Poster

Common Sense Media Review

Jennifer Green By Jennifer Green , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 15+

Engaging docu has strong messages, resilient star, swearing.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 15+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 10+

Based on 1 parent review

age 10+

What's the Story?

In 2019, multitalented performer Jennifer Lopez celebrated her 50th birthday, produced and starred in a blockbuster film, and was attached to perform the HALFTIME show at the Super Bowl. Yet at the start of this documentary detailing that extraordinary year in her life, she says she feels like her life is just beginning. That could be because she also suddenly was garnering the same kind of awards buzz and attention that she had just over 20 years earlier with the film that launched her acting career, Selena. Lopez reflects on that career and aspects of her personal life over the last two decades, the highs and lows, and the consistently critical media coverage she's received. She shows how she has continued to work hard to survive, mature, and improve in order to get to where she is now.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (1 ):
Kids say (1 ):

Though documentaries like this are intended to be flattering, the most absorbing of the breed, this one included, also reveal fresh sides to their subject and new information for viewers. That's no easy task with some celebrities, like J. Lo, who've been in the public eye for decades. Halftime reviews her long career adeptly by weaving past and present together in a single, overarching narrative. The story isn't just Jenny from the Block; the documentary attempts to craft the image of a survivor who's persisted and arrived at a newfound maturity as a person and a performer. It blends media clips from her career with interviews and tape from her then-nonstop rehearsal schedule. It also weaves Trump-era news footage together with the background of her own Puerto Rican family's struggle to make it in America.

Capitalizing on a major year of professional accomplishments and timed with the star's 50th birthday, the film promotes Lopez's endurance as a Latina role model despite a longstanding critical devaluation of her work as a performer, and it ties it all together with the contemporary political moment. "I'm not into politics," Lopez says, then notes that the Trump-era anti-immigrant climate changed all that. She even insists on infusing her Super Bowl halftime show with political messages. The film's final section is the bow on top: She sings "This Land Is Your Land" symbolically at the Biden-Harris inauguration, and end credits detail her nonprofit work and the dollar figure actuality of her brand. Of course, plenty is left out, and it would be particularly fascinating to hear and see Shakira's side of that halftime performance story. But the end result is an uplifting tale about, as one companion calls her, "a woman of color who had the audacity to pursue her dreams."

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about why Lopez has been underrated, as depicted in Halftime. What argument does the documentary construct for this? What do you think?

  • How does Lopez demonstrate perseverance in this film? How has that helped her withstand criticism and build such a long-lasting and successful career?

  • Documentaries like this one generally offer very positive portrayals of their subjects. Why do you think that is? How would the film have to be done differently to be more objective?

Movie Details

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