Parents' Guide to

Monster House

Movie PG 2006 91 minutes
Monster House Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

By Jane Boursaw , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 10+

Frightful fun for tweens and up.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 10+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 10+

Based on 55 parent reviews

age 10+

Not good

It was a very strange movie. My 10-year old said that he felt like he was watching someone else's "fever dream." As mentioned earlier, there are some really inappropriate moments, like the collected urine in bottle, the "making out", the comment about "buying drugs." I was also surprised at an attempted joke about a uvula and one of the cartoon characters said something about "isn't that a girl body part?"Prepare to explain that one. I also detected kind of an anti-obesity sentiment. At one point, a police officer called the heavier boy in the cartoon "Porky" and the entire show ends up being about an morbidly obese woman who was rescued from a freak show. She was the monster. I might have been okay with the portrayal of the obese woman, but didn't like the reference towards the overweight boy character. All in all, the movie was just very weird, morbid, and disturbing and not in an artistic way.
age 12+

What's the Story?

You know that scary old house down the street? Turns out, it's a real live monster! This animated family horror movie –- yup, that's what it is -- centers around three kids who discover that a neighbor's house is actually a living, breathing monster. It all begins when DJ (Mitchel Musso) looks out his window at the creepy house across the street. It's old. It's run-down. And it's owned by "Old Man Nebbercracker" (Steve Buscemi), the meanest guy in town who loves terrorizing the neighborhood kids. And heaven forbid any toys should land on his lawn or he'll snatch 'em away forever. DJ starts keeping track of all the lost items, so much so that he becomes a bit of an outcast. Right before Halloween, DJ's parents (Catherine O'Hara and Fred Willard) head to a convention and leave him home with a Goth babysitter, Zee (Maggie Gyllenhaal). Zee's slacker boyfriend, Bones (Jason Lee), knows all about the house. DJ's friend, Chowder (Sam Lerner) and neighbor Jenny joins in the house observations. On their watch, the kids discover that Nebbercracker isn't the only thing that's creepy about the house. The house, it seems, has a life of its own. Rounding out the cast are Skull (Jon Heder - sweet!), a pizza delivery guy and video game champ; Officer Lister (Nick Cannon), a rookie cop; Officer Landers (Kevin James), a jaded cop who's seen it all; and the house itself (Kathleen Turner, the original Jessica Rabbit).

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (55 ):
Kids say (126 ):

Monster House boasts a top-notch crew, memorable voices that fit the characters perfectly, a great story, an ingenious backstory, and a twisty-turny ending. This is one of those movies where all the planets align. The motion-capture animation is the same as that used in The Polar Express, where the characters have so much personality you feel like you're watching real people. But even more important is the story, which is approaching Pixar quality. The characters and animation revolve around the story, rather than the other way around.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about what the kids could have done differently.

  • When the adults in their lives brush off their concerns about the house, is it okay for them to figure out a solution on their own that puts them in danger?

  • And where WERE the adults anyway? What should THEY have done differently to help the kids through this situation?

Movie Details

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