Here's the deal: this is a legitimately important documentary about a historic scientific achievement. The first photograph of a black hole is genuinely mind-blowing, and this film takes you behind the scenes of how it happened.
But let's be real—this is not entertainment for most kids (or most adults). It's cerebral, slow, and unapologetically complex. The 100% critic score vs. 6.6 IMDb audience rating tells you everything: critics respect it, but regular viewers found it a slog.
If your kid is the type who watches PBS Space Time for fun or has read A Brief History of Time, they'll love this. If they're just vaguely interested in space because rockets are cool, they'll bounce off it hard.
It's safe, it's enriching, it's imaginative in its subject matter—but it's also kind of a tough watch unless you're already deeply invested in theoretical physics. Queue it up for your future astrophysicist, but don't expect it to convert the casually curious.




