Here’s what’s known about the latest age rating for Lee Cronin’s The Mummy, based on recent public classifications and reporting.
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United States: The MPAA has assigned an R rating to Lee Cronin’s The Mummy, indicating restricted viewing with strong horror content, violence, language, and disturbing imagery. This typically means under-17 requires accompanying parent or guardian in theaters. Public coverage also notes the film’s intense gore and disturbing sequences that align with an R classification.[3][6]
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United Kingdom/Ireland: In the UK, the film has received an 18 certificate from the BBFC, reflecting strong gore and violent content, and marking it as suitable for adults only. This aligns with parental guidance that warns it is not appropriate for most teenagers.[3]
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Australia: The Australian Classification Board lists the title with a suitable-maturity designation consistent with adult-focused horror, reinforcing the pattern of high-intensity content across major markets.[7]
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Additional context: Several independent guides and reviews echo that the film leans heavily into graphic violence and body horror, with warnings suggesting it is not appropriate for younger viewers and may require parental discretion for older teens in some regions.[1][4][3]
If you’d like, I can pull up the latest official classification links for each region or summarize how these ratings translate into viewing guidance (theater age restrictions, streaming eligibility, and parental advisories) for your location. Please tell me which country you’re interested in and whether you want US theater guidance, streaming considerations, or both.
Citations:
- MPAA rating and US guidance reports for The Mummy (R rating).[6]
- UK BBFC 18 certificate and rationale (strong gore/violence).[3]
- Australian Classification details for The Mummy.[7]
- Additional regional notes on content warnings and teen suitability from coverage.[4][1][3]