Parents' Guide to

Five Nights at Freddy's

By Jeffrey Anderson, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 14+

Violent video game adaptation starts well but falls apart.

Movie PG-13 2023 109 minutes
Five Nights at Freddy's Movie Poster: Against a menacing purple background, we see Freddy Fazbear, Bonnie, Chica, and Foxy, lined up behind one another, only half of their faces visible, with Cupcake visible on the right

A Lot or a Little?

What you willā€”and won'tā€”find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 13+

Based on 66 parent reviews

age 12+

my 13 year old loved it

this is a great movie i would totally recommend i brought my 13 year old daughter and she loved it
age 9+

A must see for fans of the series

I brought 2 9-yr-olds and 2 11-yr-olds and no one was scared. Scarier than Goosebumps but not as bad as real horror. Only a couple swear words. My kids are big fans and absolutely loved it.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (66 ):
Kids say (147 ):

Based on the popular horror video games, this movie starts out well, with sympathetic characters, a fun design, and an appealing comical tone, but it goes on too long and eventually falls apart. Directed and co-written by Emma Tammi, Five Nights at Freddy's gives us a family we can root for and care about and finds a nifty way to add playful silliness to the game's trademark jump scares. The practical visual FX and the restaurant location are also spooky fun. But while the mystery of the abducted Garrett is intriguing at first, the more detail is revealed, the more things start to feel spotty and slapdash. It feels like certain details were shoehorned into place. Likewise, some of the performances contribute to an awkwardness, a sense that something is being haphazardly hidden from us. When the reveals occur, they feel less like a satisfying snap than a sloppy drop. Mostly, though, the movie wears out its welcome. Perhaps Five Nights at Freddy's could have been shortened by a night or two.

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