Mild
3 of 4 found this mild
The native clothing in the scenes depicting the conquest reveal much of people's buttocks, but completely cover the center line.
A native woman jokingly asks a native actor if he has love scenes in the movie and how many girls he kisses.
There is no sexual content in this movie.
A few moments showing indigenous women with exposed breasts, but always hidden behind hair, a feeding baby, or just outside the shot, except in the background once.
Moderate
4 of 5 found this moderate
In the scenes of the conquest, the violence is not shown graphically. The "severed arm," "dogs attacking the native woman," and "burning at the stake" happen off screen (the first two) and with no gore or blood.
A leader commanding his men to cut some people's hands , then a scene where a man getting his hand cut off in front of his daughter's eyes. Scene of men getting burned in front of their families. A protesting scene showing men get beaten by the police. Man appeared beaten off in news in TV and appear after while in the jail with bruises around his eyes. Killing and shooting scene during protest.
Scene shows many injured people and a young girl get injured in her legs.
Severe
2 of 3 found this severe
Over 50 f-words; other occasional expletives.
While most of the expletives are in Spanish (especially "carajo"), the few conversations in English involve repeated use of f***ing. While potentially offensive to an American audience, the conversations seem to be with someone in England (over the phone), where this word is more casual.
In a scene in a restaurant where several people may be intoxicated, a man holds his middle finger out, half-joking, toward the man he is arguing with.
Mild
3 of 4 found this mild
Multible scenes showing a man drinking.