So when she asked me if I wanted to watch this with her it sounded like a fun plot and I usually think Rebel Wilson is pretty funny. So generally we watch a lot of movies together and I don’t worry about it too much anymore. I Haven’t even bothered to go on this site in a long time because my daughter is almost 17. Language also includes frequent use of "f-k," "s-t," "suck," "a-hole," "bitch," "crap," "d-k," "slut," and a slew of insults, many sexual or anatomical. The film's cast is diverse, and society is depicted as having evolved in its treatment of differences - for example in how (or whether) people use words like "gay" and "retarded." Sexual content is more talk than action (other than kissing and suggestive gestures/dancing), but there's a lot of raunchy talk. Stephanie learns that popularity doesn't bring happiness and that the quality of your friends is more important than how many you have.
The movie also portrays modern teens as "woke" and very sensitive to political, social, and climate concerns.
Expect to see teens drinking, smoking pot, swearing, talking about sexual acts, and being obsessed with their smartphones and number of Instagram followers. Parents need to know that Senior Year is a sometimes-raunchy comedy about a woman named Stephanie ( Rebel Wilson) who falls during a cheer stunt as a teen and wakes up 20 years later, only to be surprised by how much more apparently egalitarian high school is now.