Parents' Guide to

Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle

By Nell Minow, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 13+

Mini skirt girl power continues.

Movie PG-13 2003 106 minutes
Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 8+

Based on 2 parent reviews

age 13+

book head

tons of hand to hand combat a character is stabbed but there is no blood and gore shown a motorbike is exploded so a girl jumps onto her friends motorbike and then someone is shot of their motorbike and there is a big explosion and there is lots of fire all the angels are shot and fall from a very high place there is big battle on a roof with lots of machine guns and there is a car chase and a car explodes s--t b---t a----e sexual references
age 2+

its amazing

Watch it everyone

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (2 ):
Kids say (11 ):

This is pretty much the same movie as the first one, except with more of everything. More lovely heads shaking lovely hair in slow-mo as the Angels run away from more explosions. More lovely legs kicking more bad guys. More crazy get-ups (I know! Let's make them dress up like nuns! And strippers!). More surprise guest stars -- including one of the original Angels. More dancing. More booty shaking. More booty kicking. The only thing there's less of is plot, and does anyone who watches Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle really care about that? Certainly no one who made the movie did. Dylan, Alex, and Natalie behave as though they're at a slumber party where the girls blow stuff up and perform on-the-spot forensic analyses without any equipment in between setting each other's hair and short-sheeting each other's beds. This gives a bouncy, buoyant, bubbly feel to the story that keeps the energy level high enough to sail through the silly dialogue and story.

Problems include uninteresting villains and a dopey sidetrack as Alex's boyfriend (Matt LeBlanc) and father (John Cleese) have a pointless misunderstanding about what Alex really does on the job. Yes, Demi Moore looks sensational as an Angel turned bad, but her performance is weak. Justin Theroux is also wasted as Dylan's former boyfriend. Shia LeBeouf is in the movie for no particular reason. But Crispin Glover returns for a few nicely creepy moments as the mute Thin Man who has a thing about hair.

Movie Details

  • In theaters: June 27, 2003
  • On DVD or streaming: October 21, 2003
  • Cast: Cameron Diaz , Drew Barrymore , Lucy Liu
  • Director: McG
  • Inclusion Information: Female actors, Latino actors, Bisexual actors, Asian actors
  • Studio: Sony Pictures
  • Genre: Action/Adventure
  • Run time: 106 minutes
  • MPAA rating: PG-13
  • MPAA explanation: action violence, sensuality and language/innuendo
  • Last updated: June 20, 2023

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