Film: The Mighty (1998)

Based on the Novel: Freak the Mighty by Rodman Philbrick

CategoryDetails
MPAA RatingPG-13
Common Sense MediaAge 10+
IMDB Parents GuideModerate
SettingCincinnati, Ohio (film); Portsmouth, New Hampshire (novel)

Max Kane is enormous for his age—massive, hulking, nearly mute—and everyone assumes he’s stupid. He lives in his grandparents’ basement, haunted by the knowledge that his father murdered his mother and that he looks exactly like his father. He has no friends, no hope, no future he can imagine. Kevin Dillon is tiny, brilliant, and dying. A birth defect has left his body stunted and his organs failing, but his mind is extraordinary—stuffed with Arthurian legend, scientific knowledge, and vocabulary that dazzles and confuses everyone around him. When Kevin moves in next door, an impossible friendship begins. Kevin climbs onto Max’s shoulders, and together they become “Freak the Mighty”—Kevin’s brain directing Max’s body through adventures in their neighborhood, through school, and eventually through a confrontation with Max’s father that will test everything they’ve built together. The film is about disability, mortality, and friendship, but it’s really about how two people who each feel incomplete can become whole together—and then learn to carry that wholeness alone.

Content Breakdown: The PG-13 rating reflects several significant elements. Language includes mild profanity throughout and some crude insults directed at both boys regarding their disabilities (“moron,” “retard,” “freak”). Violence includes a genuinely frightening kidnapping sequence in which Max’s father—a convicted murderer—abducts Max and threatens violence; the confrontation is intense though not graphically violent. References to Max’s mother’s murder are present throughout; we learn his father strangled her while Max watched as a young child. Sexual content is absent. Substance use is minimal—Max’s father drinks beer. The most challenging elements are thematic: Kevin’s progressive terminal illness, the reality that he knows he’s dying and has accepted it, and his eventual death (handled with tenderness but undeniably devastating). Max’s psychological burden—believing he’s destined to become his murderous father—creates a persistent darkness beneath the adventure-story surface. Both boys face cruelty from peers about their disabilities. This is a film that earns its emotional power through genuine difficulty.

Why This Film Works for Becoming Less Needy

On the surface, Max and Kevin’s friendship looks like mutual need taken to an extreme—they literally cannot function without each other. Kevin can’t walk or reach things; Max can’t think clearly or speak up for himself. Together, with Kevin on Max’s shoulders, they form one complete person. This seems like the opposite of independence.

But the film’s deeper lesson is about what healthy interdependence teaches us. Max doesn’t become less needy by learning to need nothing—he becomes less needy by internalizing what Kevin gives him. Kevin’s belief in Max’s intelligence, Kevin’s vocabulary, Kevin’s courage, Kevin’s way of seeing the world as a place of quests and meaning—all of this gradually becomes part of Max himself. When Kevin dies, Max is devastated but not destroyed. He carries Kevin with him, writes their story, becomes capable in ways he never was alone.

The film distinguishes between neediness and need. Neediness is desperate, grasping, draining—taking from others to fill an emptiness that never fills. Need is human, mutual, generative—receiving from others what helps us grow into people who can eventually give. Max needs Kevin, but Kevin also needs Max. Neither is diminished by the need; both are expanded by the giving.

For children learning about relationships and independence, The Mighty offers a crucial nuance: becoming less needy doesn’t mean becoming isolated or pretending you don’t need anyone. It means receiving what others offer in a way that transforms you, becoming someone who carries their gifts forward even when they’re gone. Max at the end of the film still misses Kevin terribly—but he’s no longer the helpless, hopeless boy we met. Kevin’s friendship didn’t create dependency; it created capacity.

Characters to Discuss

  • Max Kane: He believes he’s stupid because everyone treats him that way. He believes he’s destined for violence because of his father’s crime and his own physical resemblance. Kevin sees something different—intelligence buried under trauma, gentleness despite strength. Which vision of Max is true? How does Kevin’s belief change what Max becomes?
  • Kevin Dillon (“Freak”): He knows he’s dying—knows it with scientific precision—and has chosen to live fully rather than wait for death. His Arthurian obsessions aren’t escapism; they’re a framework for finding meaning in a life that will be short. How does accepting mortality shape how he lives? What does his courage look like?
  • “Freak the Mighty”: The combined entity—Kevin on Max’s shoulders—is more than either boy alone. But it’s temporary by design; Kevin always knew he wouldn’t live long. Is there something problematic about this fusion, or is it exactly what both boys needed at that moment in their lives?
  • Kenny Kane (Max’s father): A murderer who claims to have changed, who tells Max that his mother’s death was an accident, who manipulates through false warmth before revealing his true nature. How does Max resist becoming his father? What finally breaks the spell of identification?
  • Gwen (Kevin’s mother): She’s terrified of Max initially—he looks like the man who killed her best friend (Max’s mother). Her journey toward accepting Max mirrors the film’s themes about seeing past appearance to reality.
  • Gram and Grim (Max’s grandparents): They love Max but are afraid of him—afraid he’ll become his father, afraid of what his silence conceals. Their fear, though understandable, reinforces Max’s self-doubt. How does well-meaning fear harm the people we’re trying to protect?

Parent Tips for This Film

Kevin’s death requires preparation: This is not a film that pulls its punch. Kevin dies. We see Max’s grief, his rage, his devastation. The death occurs off-screen, but its aftermath is shown fully—Max’s anguish, his inability to understand, his gradual return to life. For sensitive viewers, knowing in advance that Kevin dies allows emotional preparation. Consider saying: “Kevin is sick throughout the movie, and he does die at the end. It’s very sad, but the movie is really about what Kevin gave Max and how Max carries that forward.”

The murder backstory: Max’s father strangled his mother while young Max watched. This is referenced throughout and becomes central when the father returns. The murder isn’t shown, but descriptions are vivid enough to disturb. For children unfamiliar with family violence, this may require context: “Max’s father did something terrible when Max was little. The movie shows how Max lives with that memory and fears becoming like his father.”

The kidnapping sequence: Max’s father abducts him, ties him up, and threatens violence. The scene is genuinely tense and frightening. Kevin’s intervention is heroic but places both boys in danger. The sequence resolves without graphic violence, but the threat is real and sustained. For anxiety-prone viewers, consider previewing this section (approximately 75-85 minutes into the film).

Disability language: Characters use terms like “retard,” “moron,” and “freak” as insults. The film doesn’t endorse this language—it shows its cruelty—but the words are spoken. This provides opportunity for discussion: “Some characters use hurtful words to describe Max and Kevin. Why do people use language like that? How does it affect the people it’s aimed at?”

The novel differs in important ways: The book and film tell the same basic story but with significant differences in tone, setting, and specific events. If your child reads the book first, discuss: “Movies often change things from books. Let’s notice what’s different and talk about why the filmmakers might have made those choices.”

Studying the Book and Film Together

Rodman Philbrick’s Freak the Mighty is a middle-school staple with good reason—it’s accessible, emotionally powerful, and raises questions about identity, friendship, and disability that reward discussion.

What the book offers:

  • Max’s voice: The novel is narrated by Max in his distinctive, limited vocabulary—we hear his thoughts directly, which creates intimacy the film can only approximate through action.
  • Richer interiority: We understand Max’s self-loathing, his terror of becoming his father, and his love for Kevin in his own words.
  • The “unvanquished truth”: Kevin’s concept that remembering accurately is heroic runs throughout the book. Max writes their story as an act of preserving truth.
  • More time with the relationship: The episodic adventures of Freak the Mighty receive fuller treatment—we see more of their quests and more of how Kevin’s imagination transforms Max’s perception of the world.

What the film offers:

  • Visual storytelling: Seeing Max’s size, Kevin’s fragility, and their physical combination creates immediate understanding that prose must build gradually.
  • Performance: Elden Henson (Max) and Kieran Culkin (Kevin) bring the characters to life with remarkable chemistry.
  • The confrontation with Kenny Kane: The film’s kidnapping sequence is more cinematically tense than the book’s version.
  • Sharon Stone and Gena Rowlands: The adult performances ground the boys’ story in a believable community.

Discussion comparison:

  • How does hearing Max’s voice in the book differ from watching him in the film?
  • What scenes from the book do you wish had been in the movie?
  • Kevin’s death is handled differently in each version. Which affected you more, and why?

Writing exercise: After experiencing both, write a scene from Kevin’s perspective—something we never get in either version. What is Kevin thinking during a moment of your choice?

Themes for Deeper Discussion

Identity and inheritance:

Max believes he’s fated to become his father—a murderer, a monster. He looks like his father, and he’s been told (implicitly) that violence runs in his blood.

Discussion questions:

  • What evidence does Max have for believing he’ll become his father?
  • What evidence contradicts this fear?
  • How much of who we become is inherited, and how much is chosen?
  • What finally helps Max separate his identity from his father’s?

Disability and wholeness:

Both boys are disabled—Max cognitively (or so people assume), Kevin physically. Together they form something that feels “whole.” But is either boy actually incomplete alone?

Discussion questions:

  • Is Max actually intellectually disabled, or has he been treated that way until he believed it?
  • Kevin’s body is failing, but is he in any sense “incomplete”?
  • What does “Freak the Mighty” represent? Is it healthy, or does it prevent each boy from developing independently?
  • After Kevin dies, is Max incomplete again, or has something changed?

Accepting mortality:

Kevin knows he’s dying and has accepted it with remarkable equanimity. He lives fully, refuses pity, and prepares Max (as much as possible) for his absence.

Discussion questions:

  • How does Kevin’s acceptance of death shape how he lives?
  • Is his acceptance wisdom, denial, or something else?
  • What does he give Max that helps Max survive his death?
  • How do we live well knowing that everyone we love will eventually die or leave?

Neediness versus need:

The film distinguishes between desperate, grasping neediness and healthy, mutual need.

Discussion questions:

  • What’s the difference between needing someone and being needy?
  • How does Max receive Kevin’s gifts without becoming dependent?
  • By the end, Max is alone but not helpless. What changed?
  • What do you need from others? How can receiving help you grow rather than keep you stuck?

Creative Extensions

Write the sequel: Max is writing their story at the film’s end. What happens next? Write a scene from Max’s life one year later, five years later, or as an adult. How does he carry Kevin forward?

Design a quest: Kevin transforms ordinary neighborhood walks into Arthurian quests. Design a “quest” for your own neighborhood—what dragons (problems) need slaying? What treasures (goals) await?

Letter to Kevin: Write a letter from Max to Kevin after Kevin’s death. What would Max want to say? What would he want Kevin to know?

Disability representation discussion: Research how disability is represented in media. Is The Mighty a positive representation of disability? What does it get right? What might it get wrong? How have representations changed since 1998?

Related Viewing

Films about unlikely friendships:

  • E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982, PG) — Lonely boy and alien form bond; ages 7+. Also in this curriculum.
  • Son of Rambow (2007, PG-13) — Opposites create together; ages 10+. Also in this curriculum.
  • Hugo (2011, PG) — Orphan and recluse heal each other; ages 8+

Films about disability:

  • Wonder (2017, PG) — Boy with facial difference enters school; ages 8+
  • The Elephant Man (1980, PG) — Deformity and dignity; ages 12+. Also in this curriculum.
  • My Left Foot (1989, R—language) — Cerebral palsy and artistic triumph; ages 16+

Films about fathers and sons:

  • October Sky (1999, PG) — Son defies father’s expectations; ages 9+. Also in this curriculum.
  • Finding Nemo (2003, G) — Father learns to trust son’s capability; ages 5+. Also in this curriculum.

Films about mortality and friendship:

  • Bridge to Terabithia (2007, PG) — Friendship and sudden death; ages 9+
  • Tuesdays with Morrie (1999, TV-PG) — Learning from a dying teacher; ages 12+

Recommendation: Suitable for ages 10+ as suggested, but emotional intensity requires readiness for genuine difficulty. Kevin’s death, Max’s trauma history, the kidnapping sequence, and the persistent cruelty the boys face make this a film that earns its tears honestly. Preview for sensitive children; prepare all viewers for Kevin’s death. The PG-13 rating is appropriate. For families discussing disability, grief, identity, or the nature of healthy interdependence, The Mighty offers something rare: a story that shows what it costs to need someone and lose them, while also showing that what we receive in genuine friendship becomes part of us forever. Max ends the film still grieving, still alone, but no longer helpless—because Kevin lives in him now, in his vocabulary, his courage, his belief in his own worth. That’s what healthy need looks like: not dependency that diminishes, but connection that transforms.