This is important, well-made documentary journalism about a crisis that affects teenagers—but it's absolutely not for most teenagers to watch. The content is brutal: sexual assaults on unconscious minors, photos shared online, victim-blaming from entire communities, and the devastating aftermath including suicide.
For parents of older teens (16-17), this could be valuable viewing together if your kid is emotionally mature and you're ready for a serious, difficult conversation afterward. It's the kind of film that might be shown in a high school health class with counselors on standby.
But let's be clear: this isn't a 'learning opportunity' you spring on your family. It's heavy, triggering, and emotionally exhausting. The 42 WISE score reflects that while it's enriching and important, it's fundamentally unsafe and unwholesome content for younger viewers—and even for the right audience, it's more medicine than entertainment.





