Freud's Last Session (2023) Poster

Parents Guide

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Certification

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MPAA Rated PG-13 for thematic material, some bloody/violent images, sexual material and smoking.
Certification

Sex & Nudity

  • We hear references to masturbation, oral fixation and a "castration complex."
  • Freud famously made sex the center of his psychoanalysis. Sex is indeed an important topic here, and the debaters concentrate especially on homosexuality. While Freud argues that there's nothing wrong with homosexual relationships, and that sex should not be hindered, Lewis argues otherwise.
  • Throughout the film, it's fairly obvious that his own daughter is in a lesbian relationship-one that Freud refuses to acknowledge. And he uncomfortably acknowledges to Lewis that, in his own field of psychoanalysis, lesbian tendencies are inherently related to the woman's relationship with her father.
  • Freud himself seems to have an unhealthy attachment to Anna. When a male suitor comes to discuss courting his daughter, Freud rejects the matter, saying that Anna's much too young to "experience any sexual feelings." (By 1939, Anna is in her early 40s.) He insists that Anna's entire being be wrapped up in his well-being. Anna accepts this, for the most part, much to the annoyance of her apparent lover, Dorothy Burlingham. (We see the two hold hands at one point.)
  • When Anna tries to tell her father of her own erotically themed dreams, he tells her to stop-wanting to ignore their subtext. But he, too, dreams of Anna. We see a snippet of that dream or hallucination, where Anna and an androgynous other are both statues embracing in an intimate manner, with one covering Anna's breast with his/her hand.

Violence & Gore

  • In a hospital, shrapnel is removed from someone's foot.
  • Freud has metal in his own mouth, in the form of part of a prosthetic jaw. When his mouth begins to bleed and the pain grows too unbearable, he asks Lewis to help him remove it. It's a painful, bloody process.

Profanity

  • One use of "b-ch," one of "b-tard" and two of "d-n." We also hear a use or two of the British profanity "bloody." God's name is misused three times.

Alcohol, Drugs & Smoking

  • Freud offers Lewis a drink, which he initially declines. "Well, I'm going to have one, because I need one." Lewis then agrees to a whiskey. When Freud pours out the libations, he sprinkles morphine into his glass.
  • Lewis smokes, and we see him smoking with other friends in flashbacks. He and others drink at a bar. Freud smokes a cigar.
  • Morphine is seen and consumed several times.

Frightening & Intense Scenes

  • There are a few intense scenes, but most viewers will not find the film to be frightening or disturbing. Most of the movie is centered around conversation.
  • It is intense when a man knows he is slowly dying and nothing can be done.

Spoilers

The Parents Guide items below may give away important plot points.

Violence & Gore

  • We see some pretty horrific flashbacks to Lewis' experiences in World War I, including the death of Janie's son, Paddy. (Paddy had made Lewis promise to take care of his mother if he died.) Both are involved in a charge across no-man's land; blood spatters their faces as comrades fall around them, and an explosion eventually throws them both into a pit. Lewis survives, injured, but Paddy lies dead.

See also

Taglines | Plot Summary | Synopsis | Plot Keywords


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