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Christian Movie Review

In Your Dreams Christian Movie Review

(2025)

This animated fantasy follows two siblings who try to hold their family together while their parents face money stress and possible separation. Much of the story unfolds in dream worlds where the children chase a way to make everything feel perfect again.

The film has light-to-moderate surface concerns, but its bigger weight comes from family stress, fear of separation, and a message about accepting imperfect life. Christian families may want to talk through the dream logic, the emotional pressure on the children, and what hope looks like when a family is under strain.

Use the content rating for the mild scares and language, and the Christian guidance rating for the deeper family-and-worldview themes.

Content

Content Rating: 4/10

Mild

The surface content stays in the mild range for a PG animated adventure, but there are some scary dream sequences, crashing and falling, and moments of threat that may unsettle younger children. Language is light and mostly limited to insults, teasing, and potty-humor words like "shoot," "gross," "annoying," "weird," "crappy," and "turd." Sexual content is minimal, with only brief family affection and a few harmless crush-style beats.

Christian Guidance

Christian Guidance: 6/10

Meaningful Guidance

The strongest concern is not crude content but the emotional and worldview framing around family instability. The story treats dreams as a place to fix real-life problems, and it places a lot of weight on the children’s fear that their parents may separate; that can open good conversation about how Christians face uncertainty with honesty, prayer, and hope in Christ rather than chasing a perfect family. The film also carries a gentle moral about imperfect people and messy families, which is broadly humane, though it still deserves discussion about where lasting hope comes from.

Dream peril Family strain Mild potty humor

Content Indicators

Violence / Intensity

Some

The dream sequences bring falling, crashing, collapsing, and other perilous moments, including scary characters and a sense of danger that can feel intense for younger viewers. The action is stylized rather than graphic, but the fear level is noticeable in the nightmare scenes.

Language

Some

Language is mostly mild teasing and potty humor, with words like "shoot," "gross," "annoying," "weird," "crappy," and "turd." The jokes are more childish than harsh, but families sensitive to crude humor may still want to note them.

Sexual Content

Minimal

Romantic material stays light. The film includes brief family kissing and a small crush-style thread, with no sexual behavior or explicit material.

Occult / Spiritual

Some

Dream travel and fantasy figures drive the plot, with the children entering a dream world to seek a perfect family and make sense of their fears. The film does not center on occult practice, but the dream framework gives spiritual weight to a made-up inner world, so parents may want to discuss the difference between imagination and real hope in Christ.

Faith & Values Conflict

Some

The story treats dreams as a tool for fixing life rather than pointing children toward prayer, wisdom, and trust in God.

Cultural Messaging

Some

Stevie’s identity is tied to being the fixer in the family, and she keeps pushing for everything to be "perfect." That pressure matters because the film gently challenges perfectionism, and parents may want to talk about worth that comes from being loved by God rather than being the one who holds everything together.

Good discussion potential - see family prompts below
Micah Brooks portrait

Human Reviewed

Reviewed by Micah Brooks

Culture and Discernment Editor

Reviewed 21 May 2026

Micah covers action, fantasy, and franchise releases, with close attention to violence, spiritual themes, and moral framing.

In Your Dreams Christian Movie Review (2025)

Guidance: Talk Together

The film has light-to-moderate surface concerns, but its bigger weight comes from family stress, fear of separation, and a message about accepting imperfect life. Christian families may want to talk through the dream logic, the emotional pressure on the children, and what hope looks like when a family is under strain.

Why This Guidance Level

This film sits in a middle ground for Christian families: the visible content is fairly mild, but the emotional pressure is real. The dream adventure includes scary moments and a little coarse language, while the deeper concern is the way the story centers on fear of separation, control, and the hope that a perfect fix will solve family pain. That makes it a good candidate for parent-child conversation rather than a simple yes-or-no reaction.

Faith & Worldview Perspective

The film values family loyalty, perseverance, and the truth that people are imperfect, which are healthy themes. At the same time, it leans on dream logic and a wish for a perfect family to solve deep problems, so parents may want to discuss how real hope is found in God’s care and in Christ, not in controlling outcomes.

Truths Reflected

  • Siblings can be loyal helpers to one another.
  • Families can stay connected even when life is messy.

Tensions to Discuss

  • The story treats dreams as a tool for fixing life rather than pointing children toward prayer, wisdom, and trust in God.
  • It places emotional weight on making family life perfect, which can crowd out the Christian hope that God is faithful even when families are strained.

Content & Discernment Markers

Occult & Spiritual Content

  • Dream travel and fantasy figures drive the plot, with the children entering a dream world to seek a perfect family and make sense of their fears. The film does not center on occult practice, but the dream framework gives spiritual weight to a made-up inner world, so parents may want to discuss the difference between imagination and real hope in Christ.

Sexuality & Relationships

  • Romantic material stays light. The film includes brief family kissing and a small crush-style thread, with no sexual behavior or explicit material.

Identity Themes

  • Stevie’s identity is tied to being the fixer in the family, and she keeps pushing for everything to be “perfect.” That pressure matters because the film gently challenges perfectionism, and parents may want to talk about worth that comes from being loved by God rather than being the one who holds everything together.

Violence & Intensity

  • The dream sequences bring falling, crashing, collapsing, and other perilous moments, including scary characters and a sense of danger that can feel intense for younger viewers. The action is stylized rather than graphic, but the fear level is noticeable in the nightmare scenes.

Language & Humour

  • Language is mostly mild teasing and potty humor, with words like “shoot,” “gross,” “annoying,” “weird,” “crappy,” and “turd.” The jokes are more childish than harsh, but families sensitive to crude humor may still want to note them.

Other Content Notes

  • The heart of the film is family stress: the parents argue about money, work, and change, and Stevie worries about what it means when her mother says, “Something’s gotta change.” Parents may want to discuss how children carry anxiety when adults are under pressure.

Notable Moments

  • Dreams turn scary: Stevie explains that her dreams keep turning into nightmares, and the scene shifts into thunder, crashing, and a tense sense of danger. This matters because the film uses dream imagery to externalize fear, which may be intense for younger children.

    “But, lately, all my dreams… Keep turning into nightmares.”

  • Parents under strain: The parents argue about bills, work, and the future, and Stevie immediately reads the moment as a sign that something is wrong. Parents may want to discuss how children often hear adult stress as a threat to family security.

    “Jenn: “But things are different now. Something’s gotta change.""

  • Sibling teasing and care: Stevie and Elliot bicker constantly, but the teasing is wrapped in affection and teamwork. The film uses their back-and-forth to show that siblings can be irritating and loyal at the same time.

    “Stevie: “Why do you have to be so annoying?""

  • Perfection pressure: Stevie insists that breakfast has to be perfect, which captures her need to control the family’s chaos. That moment opens a useful conversation about perfectionism and the limits of human control.

    “This has to be perfect.”

Discussion Prompts

  • Family stress and fear: What do you think Stevie is afraid of when her parents start arguing?
    • Biblical guidance: The Bible invites us to bring anxiety to God in prayer and to trust His care even when a family feels unsettled.
    • Scripture: Philippians 4:6-7, Psalm 56:3
  • Perfection and control: Why do you think Stevie wants everything to be perfect, and what happens when people try to control everything?
    • Biblical guidance: Scripture reminds us that God is wise and faithful, and that our hope is not in perfect circumstances but in His steady love.
    • Scripture: Proverbs 3:5-6, 2 Corinthians 12:9
  • Hope in hard seasons: When a family is under pressure, what does real hope look like for a Christian?
    • Biblical guidance: Christian hope is anchored in Jesus Christ, who stays faithful when life is messy and gives peace that is deeper than circumstances.
    • Scripture: Romans 15:13, John 16:33

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Official regional ratings

Local ratings remain available for reference, but LionLens separates those classifications from Christian family discernment.

US: PG NZ: PG UK: PG CA: PG

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LionLens reviews are written with subtitle and dialogue evidence where available, official regional ratings data, source research, and final human editorial review before publication.

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