None
50 of 66 found this to have none
Mild flirtation between the male character and some of the females.
The two main characters share a kiss.
Fowler describes Americans as being 'oversexed'.
The chickens use a pair of underpants as a tail for their escape plane.
Many hens simultaneously and enthusiastically offer to share their bunk with a rooster.
Mild
41 of 65 found this mild
A hen is carried by her neck and gets beheaded off-screen.
A woman gets thrown off a golf buggy.
Mrs Tweedy kicks her husband in the backside. He is later seen with a footprint in the spot where it happened.
Rocky is knocked out with a black eye in a fight, with one eye popped out, laying on the floor. Very graphic but only seen for two seconds. (He himself is on the floor, his eye stays in its socket.)
A rooster is comically slapped in the face by a chicken.
A bad character constantly has accidents with a pie machine.
None
40 of 64 found this to have none
One of the two mice says "Flippin' Hell".
One use of "hell" in the whole film. The phrase "thieving little buggers" can be heard once. But other than that, no other bad profanity is heard throughout the rest of the film since this is a G-rated motion picture.
HBO content advisory: rated G for violence (V) and adult language (AL).
Mr. Tweedy calls all the chickens "thieving little buggers".
None
45 of 55 found this to have none
An empty tobacco pipe is used as a trumpet, then later as a horn. It later is recycled for a shower head when a shower breaks.
A very brief joke about a cocktail, when a character is drinking water in a posh fashion.
Moderate
34 of 78 found this moderate
A brawl is started, with shouting and screaming for their lives.
Many of the characters are in peril throughout the movie.
Mrs. Tweedy could be terrifying to young audience, especially her face whole she's being angry.
Generally a really dark film that can scare viewers, but generally a movie kids can watch.
The guard dogs might scare some kids.