Common Sense Note
Parents need to know that most of this movie's 110 minutes are spent with guns blazing while the hero and heroine are in constant jeopardy from marauding drug lords. It's a repetitious cycle of getting caught, getting away, and beginning the chase again. The villains are Hispanic cartoon stereotypes who continually exhibit foolish, self-destructive behavior. With almost no blood or gore, the violence is mostly unreal, not scary, and generally reminiscent of 1940s and '50s Western violence (i.e., Roy Rogers or Hopalong Cassidy). Hero Dundee's idea of recreational fishing is dynamiting a river and scooping up the dead fish afterward.
Sexual
Content
Some spoken innuendo: "what's he like in bed?" and "how's it hanging?" one romantic kiss; heroine shows her bra to entice bad guys and capture them.
Violence
Wild West-like shoot-'em-ups in multiple scenes (without blood or gore). Off-camera murders. Dundee as "super human" bests villains in scene after scene of physical action, including dangling a man from a skyscraper. A kidnapping at gunpoint. Threats with knife, hairpulling, subway gunplay, punches.
Language
Frequent use of "s--t." One instance each of: "that bastard," "bitch," and "shove it."
Social
Behavior
Hero is shown "fishing" with dynamite. Villains are stereotypical Latin drug lords, drug runners, and henchmen. Some Asian stereotypes seen as well.
Consumerism
Not applicable
Drugs / Tobacco /
Alcohol
Heroes are threatened by Latin drug criminals (cocaine references). Some beer drinking, smoking on two occasions.