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Movie Reviews: Inside Out 2 Christian Parent Review, What I'd Discuss With My Kids After Watching


When I first heard Pixar was releasing a sequel to Inside Out, I was both excited and cautious. The original film gave us such a beautiful framework for talking with kids about emotions, but would the sequel hold up? More importantly, would it align with the values I want to pass on to my children?

After watching Inside Out 2 with my family, I can tell you it's absolutely worth seeing together. But like most modern films, it comes with both incredible conversation starters and some worldview differences we need to address as Christian parents.

Christian Safety Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5 Stars)

Inside Out 2 is rated PG and is genuinely safe for most families. Here's what you need to know:

Content Breakdown:

  • Mild Language: 2-3 instances of "oh my gosh" or "what the heck", nothing stronger

  • Violence/Gore: Zero, this is an emotional journey, not a physical one

  • Sexual Content: None

  • Scary Scenes: Brief moments of anxiety visualization that might feel intense for sensitive younger kids

  • Disrespect to Parents: Several scenes where Riley tells her parents to "go away" or acts dismissive

Best for: Ages 7 and up, though teenagers will connect most deeply with the themes

The film lost one star in my rating primarily because of the humanistic worldview it promotes (more on that below) and the unresolved disrespect toward parents. But content-wise, it's one of the cleaner mainstream films you'll find.

Teen girl surrounded by colorful emotion orbs representing Inside Out 2 themes of joy, sadness, and anxiety

What Makes This Film Special

Inside Out 2 picks up as Riley enters adolescence, and new emotions arrive at headquarters: Anxiety, Envy, Embarrassment, and Ennui (boredom). The original crew, Joy, Sadness, Fear, Anger, and Disgust, suddenly has to share control.

The brilliance of this film is how it visualizes the internal struggle every teenager faces: Who am I becoming? What do I believe about myself? How do I handle overwhelming feelings?

For Christian families, this creates a golden opportunity. The movie gives us a shared language to discuss things our kids might struggle to put into words.

Core Discussion Points for After the Credits Roll

1. Riley's Core Beliefs About Herself

One of the film's central themes revolves around Riley's "core beliefs", statements like "I'm a good person," "My parents are proud of me," and "I'm a good friend."

When we got home, I asked my kids: "How did Riley's beliefs about herself affect her choices?"

This opened up a powerful conversation. We talked about how Riley's desperation to believe she was "good enough" for the high school hockey team led her to make poor choices, stealing a coach's notebook, breaking a promise to her childhood friends, and pushing people away.

Here's where Scripture becomes essential. While it's wonderful that Riley values being kind and loyal, the film suggests we can find our worth by looking inward and affirming ourselves. But Romans 3:23 reminds us that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God."

I explained to my kids that our identity isn't based on being perfect or even being "good people." Our worth comes from being loved by God, period. We're called to grow in faith and character, but our value was already established when God created us in His image.

Human figure with glowing heart filled with emotion symbols illustrating Christian identity and feelings

2. How We Handle Big Emotions

The movie does something beautiful: it shows that all emotions, even anxiety and sadness, have a place. Riley learns she can't just push away uncomfortable feelings; she has to acknowledge them and work through them.

I appreciated this message because too often, Christian culture has wrongly suggested we should always be joyful and never struggle. That's not biblical. Even Jesus wept. David wrote psalms filled with lament. Paul spoke openly about his hardships.

However, the film's solution to anxiety is purely self-focused: look within, practice self-reflection, and manage your thoughts on your own.

As Christians, we believe something deeper. Philippians 4:6-7 tells us: "Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus."

I told my kids: "It's okay to feel anxious. It's normal to feel overwhelmed sometimes. But we don't have to carry those feelings alone. We can bring them to God."

3. Making Moral Choices Under Pressure

Riley faces several ethical dilemmas in the film:

  • Should she steal the coach's notebook to gain an advantage?

  • Should she break her promise to her childhood friends?

  • Should she prioritize her own success over loyalty?

The movie clearly shows these choices as wrong, which I appreciated. Riley's actions lead to consequences and broken relationships.

This gave us a chance to talk about Proverbs 12:22: "The Lord detests lying lips, but he delights in people who are trustworthy." And Proverbs 28:13: "Whoever conceals their sins does not prosper, but the one who confesses and renounces them finds mercy."

One gap in the film: Riley never truly apologizes or seeks forgiveness for her choices. Things just sort of... work out. In real life, restoration requires humility, confession, and repentance. That's a conversation worth having.

Crossroads showing honest path versus shortcut path illustrating moral choices for Christian families

4. Respect for Parents

Throughout the film, Riley snaps at her parents, tells them to go away, and becomes visibly frustrated with their attempts to connect.

Some of this is realistic, teenagers do push boundaries. But the film never addresses this disrespect or shows Riley making amends.

I used this as a teaching moment about Ephesians 6:1-3: "Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. 'Honor your father and mother', which is the first commandment with a promise, 'so that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth.'"

We talked about how even when we feel misunderstood or frustrated, there are respectful ways to communicate. And when we mess up, we need to own it and apologize.

The Worldview We Need to Address

Here's the biggest tension: Inside Out 2 operates from a secular humanistic framework. The message is essentially, "You have everything you need within yourself to overcome challenges. Look inward. Believe in yourself. Manage your own emotions."

This isn't entirely wrong, self-awareness and emotional intelligence are valuable skills. But it's incomplete.

The Christian worldview says we were designed for relationship, with God first, then with others. We're not meant to be self-sufficient. We need community. We need the Holy Spirit's guidance. We need God's truth to anchor us when our feelings are all over the place.

After watching the film, I reminded my kids of Proverbs 3:5-6: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight."

Yes, understand your emotions. Yes, develop healthy coping skills. But don't stop there. Bring everything to the One who created you and knows you completely.

Takeaway / Next Step

Inside Out 2 is a valuable tool for Christian families: not because it perfectly reflects our faith, but because it opens doors for crucial conversations.

Here's my challenge: Don't just watch the movie and move on. Use it. Ask your kids questions. Share your own struggles with emotions. Point them to Scripture. Model what it looks like to bring your anxieties to God rather than trying to self-manage everything.

And if your kids are resistant to these deeper conversations, that's okay. Plant the seeds. Keep the dialogue open. Let them know you're a safe person to talk to about hard things.

The world will tell them to look inward for answers. Our job as parents is to gently: consistently: point them upward and outward instead.

Thanks for reading this review! If you found it helpful, I'd love for you to share it with other parents who might be wondering whether Inside Out 2 is worth the watch. You can also reach out to me on the site if you have questions or want to discuss other family-friendly content. Just visiting helps raise funds for families who lost children at no cost to you: a small way we can serve others together.

And if you're looking for a faith community that meets you where you are, check out Boundless Online Church: you can access teachings and community privately or sign up to go deeper. Let's keep learning, growing, and loving like Jesus, one conversation at a time.

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

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