The original theatrical cut of Puss in Boots is a vibrant, fast-paced heist movie. It features dancing cats, romantic banter, and toilet humor. A "FanCut - PG-11" would likely strip away much of the broader comedy to make room for a noir-inspired atmosphere.
This is the centerpiece of every PG-11 edit.
The original scene at "Mama Luna's Cat Rescue" is played for tragicomedy. In the FanCut, the editor removes the laugh track. We hear Puss hyperventilating. The camera holds on his dilated pupils for three full seconds. It is uncomfortable. It is real. Suddenly, the PG rating feels insufficient. Puss in Boots - FanCut - PG-11
If you grew up watching Shrek 2 on repeat, you remember the original Puss in Boots: a swashbuckling, ladies-man, lethal little furball who cried “¡Yo no fui!” and meant it. Then came his solo films—charming, colorful, and undeniably kid-friendly .
On the surface, a movie about a talking cat in a feathered hat doesn't scream for a gritty reboot. However, the franchise has always flirted with darkness. The original theatrical cut of Puss in Boots
But for a growing segment of the fandom, one question lingers:
Before diving into specific edits, we must define the term. Official MPAA ratings are rigid: G is for general audiences, PG is for parental guidance, and PG-13 requires parental caution for under-13s. This is the centerpiece of every PG-11 edit
In the original film, Puss is an unstoppable fighter. The FanCut would introduce "vulnerability editing."
While the original Puss in Boots (2011) and its acclaimed sequel The Last Wish (2022) were rated PG by the Motion Picture Association, they pushed the boundaries of that rating with swashbuckling violence, thematic depth, and terrifying imagery. But what happens when a fan editor decides to lean into those darker edges? What does a PG-11 rating—a rating that doesn't officially exist in the American system but implies a bridge between family-friendly and teen-oriented—look like for the infamous outlaw cat?
The FanCut has gained traction on social platforms like YouTube and TikTok , where editors share "Death Edits" and character montages that highlight the character's depth. This grassroots project demonstrates how fans can reimagine established family-friendly franchises to better reflect the evolving tastes of their audience.
Conversely, supporters point to the success of The Last Wish itself. That film was PG, but it terrified children and moved adults to tears. The PG-11 cut, they argue, is merely an extension of that emotional honesty—a version for the fans who grew up with the character and are now facing their own mortality.
Pick yer 
Yer booty is now 1234 

