Enter the .
This isn’t a bloody R-rated mess. And it’s not the G-rated Saturday morning cartoon. This is the . What’s the PG-11 Cut? For those unfamiliar, a “PG-11” rating doesn’t officially exist (the MPA uses PG-13). But in the fan-editing world, PG-11 has become shorthand for: “Mild language, darker thematic elements, slightly sharper violence, and jokes that parents will actually laugh at without their kids asking awkward questions.” Puss in Boots - FanCut - PG-11
The original scripts lean hard into “darn,” “fiddlesticks,” and “what the heck.” The PG-11 cut restores one mild swear per 20 minutes . Nothing you’d hear on network TV after 9 PM. But when Puss loses his eighth life, he now growls, “What the hell was that?” It lands. It works. It doesn’t feel forced. Enter the
Here’s a blog post written for a fan edit blog or movie review site, announcing a hypothetical of Puss in Boots (2011) or Puss in Boots: The Last Wish (2022). Title: Sharper Claws, Darker Jokes: Why “Puss in Boots – PG-11 Fan Cut” is the Purrfect Middle Ground This is the