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[Movie Reviews]: Elio Christian Review, Is It OK for Christian Kids? Here’s the Truth

Movie Reviews


If your family is anything like mine, animated movies are usually an easy “yes”… until the trailers start hinting at danger, aliens, moral gray areas, or jokes that feel like they were written for adults. Elio (a space-themed adventure) has a big heart, strong emotional themes, and just enough peril to make some parents pause.

This is my Christian parent-style review, what’s in it, what to watch for, and how to turn it into a discipleship moment instead of a stressful guessing game.

Note: Even “safe” movies hit kids differently. Sensitivity, anxiety levels, and past experiences matter just as much as the rating.

Quick Answer: Is Elio OK for Christian kids?

Generally, yes: especially with parental guidance. From the available content notes and early summaries, Elio is described as mostly family-safe, with moments of danger/peril, mild crass humor, and a lead character who lies and breaks rules (which is important to talk through).

If your child handles Pixar-style emotional intensity and sci-fi action well, this one will likely land as a meaningful, conversation-worthy watch.

Christian Safety Rating (1–5 stars)

Christian Safety Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ (4/5)

Why not 5/5? Because the movie includes threat/peril, war-like imagery, a couple of crass terms, and a few moments that might be intense for sensitive kids.

Parent Content Breakdown (with specific counts)

Based on the research notes provided, here are the clear red-flag categories parents typically want quantified:

Language (curse words / crude talk)

  • Curse words:0 reported

  • Crass terms:2 (mildly crude wording)

  • Blasphemy (using God/Jesus as a swear):0 reported

Violence / peril / scary moments

  • Gore moments:0

  • War-like / battle imagery:multiple sequences (aliens in conflict; threat scenes)

  • “Torture chamber” style setting:1 sequence (spikes / intimidation vibe; not graphic)

  • Characters in peril:multiple moments (sci-fi danger, tension)

Sexual content / nudity

  • Nudity:0

  • Sexual content:0 reported

Occult / witchcraft / spiritual themes

  • Occult practices:0 reported (There’s sci-fi “alien world” material, but that’s not the same thing as occult content.)

Substance / gross-out humor

  • Vomit moment:1 (after an alien beverage)

Behavioral concerns (important for discipleship conversations)

  • Lying / rule-breaking by main character:recurring (this is a theme to process, not just a one-off gag)

What Elio is about (parent-friendly overview)

Without spoiling key plot beats, Elio centers on a kid who feels out of place: lonely, overlooked, and desperate to belong. He ends up pulled into a much larger world (literally), where identity, courage, and sacrifice become the big questions.

That core setup is exactly why so many families end up loving it: it’s not just a space adventure: it’s a story about wanting to be wanted.

What Christian families will likely appreciate

1) Loneliness and belonging (a discipleship doorway)

A major thread is that Elio feels alone: and the story pushes him toward the truth that he’s not.

That pairs naturally with:

  • Psalm 139 (God sees and knows us)

  • Deuteronomy 31:6 (God will not leave us)

  • Matthew 28:20 (Jesus is with us always)

If your child is in a season of feeling excluded at school, left out socially, or unsure of themselves, this theme can be a gentle way to open a deeper conversation.

2) Identity: worth isn’t earned, it’s given

A lot of kids today subconsciously believe: “If I’m impressive, I’ll be loved.” This movie’s emotional center gives parents an opening to say:

  • “You don’t have to perform to be loved in this family.”

  • “God doesn’t love you because you’re useful: He loves you because you’re His.”

That’s discipleship in everyday language.

3) Sacrificial love is treated as heroic

From the notes available, the story lifts up self-sacrifice as a high virtue. That’s one of the most natural bridges to the gospel you can find in mainstream family entertainment:

  • “What does it mean to lay your life down for someone?”

  • “Why does Jesus’ sacrifice matter?”

  • “How do we live sacrificially in small ways this week?”

Silhouette of a boy under a cosmic sky representing themes of identity and belonging in our Elio Christian review.

What to watch for (and how to prepare)

1) Sci-fi intensity: peril and fear

Even without gore, danger can be spiritually and emotionally loud for younger kids. If your child struggles with:

  • nighttime fears,

  • anxiety,

  • intrusive thoughts,

  • or sensitivity to threat scenes,

…you might want to preview it first, or watch together in a “lights on, pause-friendly” way.

Practical tip: Tell them ahead of time: “Some scenes might feel scary, but we can pause anytime.”

That single sentence helps kids feel safe and keeps you from having to guess what they’re feeling.

2) “Torture chamber” vibe (not graphic, but intense)

The mention of a torture-chamber-like location with spikes sounds more like a cartoonish intimidation setting than anything graphic. Still, it’s worth noting because kids can latch onto imagery even when it’s not bloody.

If your child asks, keep it simple:

  • “That’s a bad place meant to scare people.”

  • “In real life, hurting people is evil: and God cares about justice.”

3) Lying and rule-breaking (a recurring character habit)

This is the big one for many Christian parents: not because a movie can’t show sin, but because kids sometimes copy what they admire.

Instead of banning it automatically, I recommend using this framework:

  • Name it: “He lied there.”

  • Ask: “Why do you think he did that?”

  • Disciple: “What would honesty have looked like?”

  • Apply: “Have you ever felt like lying to avoid trouble?”

This keeps the conversation formative instead of preachy.

Age guidance (my practical estimate)

Every family is different, but here’s a useful starting point:

  • Ages 5–7: Could be intense; watch together; be ready to pause for fear/peril scenes.

  • Ages 8–10: Likely fine with guidance; great age for the belonging/identity conversations.

  • Ages 11–13: Usually solid; discussion will go deeper (identity, truth, courage).

  • Teens: Often appreciate the emotional themes; still worth discussing truthfulness and identity.

If you’ve let your kids watch other PG sci-fi or “peril” movies without lingering fear, Elio should be manageable.

A minimalist path in an alien world representing the sci-fi adventure and curiosity in the movie Elio.

Faith conversation starters for after the movie

If you only do one thing, do this: ask a question on the drive home. Here are a few easy ones.

For younger kids

  • “What was the scariest part?”

  • “What was the kindest part?”

  • “Who helped Elio when he felt alone?”

For older kids / preteens

  • “Where did Elio try to find his worth?”

  • “What did he believe about himself at the beginning?”

  • “What changed his mind: truth, love, or fear?”

Gospel bridge questions (gentle, not forced)

  • “When you feel alone, what helps you remember God is close?”

  • “What does Jesus say about our value?”

  • “What’s one way we could love someone who feels left out this week?”

How Elio compares to other upcoming “family event” movies

Parents are juggling a lot of titles right now: Minecraft Movie, Lilo & Stitch, even Superman 2025: and each comes with different concerns.

Here’s the simplest comparison:

  • If you’re worried about heavy agendas:Elio is described as avoiding heavy-handed messaging.

  • If you’re worried about spiritual/occult content:Elio appears more sci-fi than spiritual.

  • If you’re worried about violence: It’s more peril and tension than gore.

  • If you’re worried about imitation behavior: The lying/rule-breaking habit is the key discussion point.

Parent and child silhouettes walking together, symbolizing faith-based guidance for Christian families.

Takeaway / Next Step (for Christian families)

If you’re trying to raise kids who love Jesus in a noisy world, the goal usually isn’t to find “perfect” entertainment: it’s to build wisdom.

Here’s the simple next step I recommend:

  1. Watch together (especially for younger kids).

  2. Pause when needed (fear and moral choices are teachable moments).

  3. Talk about identity: “You are loved because God made you, not because you earned it.”

  4. Practice course correction: If your child relates to Elio’s lying or impulsiveness, don’t shame: coach. Help them see a better way and try again.

That’s growth. That’s discipleship. That’s learning to love like Jesus: steady, brave, and honest.

Compliance + Pre-Flight Checks (internal workflow note)

  • Tone check: Educational, engaging, family-focused; no shaming language.

  • Compliance check: No prohibited organizations mentioned; first-person “stealth” voice maintained; content counts included; CTA requirements queued for final block.

  • Art/images check: Total images = 4 (1 hero + 3 placeholders). No image placed at the end.

Routing: This draft is ready for compliance approval before any Wix publishing.

CTA (mandatory)

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reach out to me on the site. visiting helps raise funds for families who lost children at no cost. https://www.laynemcdonald.comhttps://boundlessonlinechurch.org Need prayers? Text us day or night at 1-901-213-7341.

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Dr. Layne McDonald
Creative Pastor • Filmmaker • Musician • Author
Memphis, TN

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