British kidnapping drama is talky but absorbing for adults.
Parents Need to Know
Why Age 15+?
Any Positive Content?
Violence & Scariness
some
The story concerns the kidnapping and 13-year imprisonment of a 13-year-old girl; young woman submits to a rape investigation on-screen, and we see bruises, marks, her underwear being bagged for investigation; firearms are brandished (but not fired) in a home invasion; references to rape.
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A couple is seen naked in bed (no private parts); a reference to "shagging." Subtle references to rape -- for example, a rape kit is gathered on-screen.
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Cursing: "s--t," a man calls a woman a "bitch" jokingly. A woman calls a man a "pussy" to say he's cowardly; a reference to "shagging"; characters sometimes scream at each other: "Shut up!"
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Law enforcement professionals are present, capable, and intrepid, which helps counter the scary message sent by a drama about a kidnapped teen.
Positive Role Models
a little
Family members have strong bonds and are supportive of each other; characters also have complicated motives that emerge over the course of the drama.
Parents Need to Know
Parents need to know that Thirteen is a drama that centers on the kidnapping and long imprisonment of a 13-year-old girl. There are references to rape; we see part of a rape investigation that shows bruises and marks on a young woman's body and her underwear being taken and bagged. Guns are brandished but not fired during a home invasion; the details of the imprisonment are discussed. The emotional effects of the kidnapping are shown at harrowing length. A brief scene shows a sympathetic character chopping up lines of white powder on a mirror; of-age characters drink wine at dinner. Cursing includes "s--t," a man calling a woman a "bitch," and a woman calling a man a "pussy." The plot moves slowly and is centered on grievous crimes, making this drama unsuitable for young viewers.
Mostly writing this review to say that while Common Sense Media is pretty accurate with the age rating, their review seems oddly incomplete as if the reviewer stopped watching after the first episode or so... there’s definitely stronger language than what’s mentioned (several F words), references to pregnancy and miscarriage, characters being held at gunpoint, a car crash, bloody injuries in several situations, a character being tied up, a character being slammed against a wall, fairly detailed descriptions of a murder, a couple shown very vigorously having sex for a few seconds (no nudity but still would have thought it would at least be mentioned), some very creepy behaviour from the kidnapper (a lot of uncomfortable stroking, drugging her, making her undress in front of him etc) and probably several more things that I was fully expecting to come up in the average Common Sense Media Review, but didn’t... at this point you’d be better off reading the IMDB parental guide if you wanted an accurate idea of what content is actually in the show, but I thought I’d leave this here just so people don’t have to go into it completely unprepared!
As for an actual review of the series, I personally enjoyed it! Some aspects seemed a bit far-fetched even to a person who has little knowledge of how the police force operates (and was willing to give it the benefit of the doubt because of that), some of the romantic subplots/general character drama seemed a bit cliche and/or not developed enough for me to personally care about it, and the ending was more abrupt than I expected it to be but overall I enjoyed it and thought the acting and general execution of it was, on the whole, really good! I keep going back and forth between giving it 3 stars or 4, so I guess 3.5 might be a good compromise?
THIRTEEN years ago, 13-year-old Ivy Moxham was kidnapped. Now a young woman (Jodie Comer) claiming to be Ivy has reappeared -- and thrown the world, and her own family, into chaos. Ivy has few details about her kidnapping, kidnapper, or imprisonment to tell investigators Elliott Carne (Richard Rankin) and Lisa Merchant (Valene Kane), and what she does have to say doesn't make a lot of sense. Her sister Emma (Katherine Rose Morley) suspects that this isn't really her sister; her mother Catherine (Natasha Little) and father Angus (Stuart Graham) refuse to believe anything else. Ivy's old boyfriend Tim (Aneurin Barnard) finds himself bewildered by the changes in Ivy yet captivated by her strange charms. And as the police chase her kidnapper, the answers seem to keep getting further away.
Creepy, measured, and mesmerizing, this drama takes a clichéd premise and makes it fresh and absorbing with finely drawn characters played by magnetic actors. Missing children and women-in-peril stories are crime-drama staples, and even the makers of rote TV police procedurals know that an easy way to grab viewers is to present a pretty young thing in peril with a tearful family praying for her safe return.
But there's more at work here. Thirteen takes the time to acquaint viewers with characters, chiefly Ivy, a bundle of twitching nerves whose haunted eyes speak volumes about the damage she's suffered, even if it takes investigators some time to work out how. Plot points are doled out slowly -- the drama thankfully lacks the cliffhanger-before-each-commercial-break structure of American TV shows -- and viewers who like a more slam-bang type of plotting may find the whole thing talky. But viewers with a bit of patience will enjoy watching the Ivy's puzzles unfold slowly, realistically, and with mounting menace.
Death is often glossed over in movies and on TV shows -- a character dies, but we don't see the effect of that death on loved ones and family members. Why is that choice made? Does this describe Thirteen? Does the realism of this series make more of an emotional impact on viewers?
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Common Sense Media's unbiased ratings are created by expert reviewers and aren't influenced by the product's creators or by any of our funders, affiliates, or partners.