

(PaPa, B, LLL, VVV, SS, NN, A, MM) Strong (but not propagandistic), somewhat deistic pagan worldview that brings up some valid moral questions about genetic engineering and crossing moral boundaries but also in an abhorrent manner plot-wise, with some moral questions discussed and some moral warnings sounded and some references to God, but mostly in the form of questions with an irrational streak, such as asking that, if God did not want human beings to mess with genes in a scientific lab, why did he give us the ability to do it (God also gives us the ability to torture infants for fun or commit adultery but that does not mean He wants us to do those things), plus an anti-vegetarian joke is made about modern young people and others who try to force their (often) unnatural and anti-scientific vegetarian beliefs on others about 21 mostly strong obscenities (including many “f” words and one “f” word in end credits of music titles), four strong profanities and three light profanities some very strong, often scary violence includes creature’s stinger cut off, two genetically created blobs kill one another in very bloody fashion after the female unexpectedly turns into a male, surgical knife starts to cut into human-like skin, violent rape scene, creature’s face is bloody as it eats a rabbit raw, creature kills man with stinger, images of a least two slightly bloody male corpses after creature kills them, creature kills cat with stinger, woman hits head and has small bloody wound on forehead, creature threatens people, etc.
Splice 2 dren legacy movie#
A better, less sensationalistic movie would have toned down the gratuitous explicit content, created a better script, and answered the moral questions it raises with biblical truth that inspires rather than titillates. It also wonders cogently at one point, if you break one moral boundary, doesn’t that mean you can break all the moral boundaries? Its plot, however, degenerates into silly situations and dialogue and involves some really abhorrent content. SPLICE does bring up some important current moral issues regarding genetic engineering and cloning. Then, the creature becomes a curious teenager, leading to abhorrent sexual allusions, murder and rape. Even Clive gets wrapped up in this fantasy. She begins treating the creature like her daughter, however.


She convinces Clive that the creature is aging rapidly, so they may as well keep it alive until it dies. After seeing the human-like, but clearly animalistic creature, Elsa’s mother instincts take over. Two young Canadian scientists, Clive and Elsa, who also live together, disobey the law by secretly creating a new female creature with both animal and human genes. SPLICE is an R-rated horror movie dealing with current issues of genetic engineering and establishing moral boundaries.
