Potentially considered so. Adam is a little mean to his past self, but his past self is not affected. Young Adam says some insensitive stuff to his mom.
No, but people who are shot with "future weapons" evaporate into thin air with an effect that MIGHT remind some people of fire, in that there's a reddish glow when it happens.
No, but a boy of 12 is in imminent mortal danger several times. He doesn't seem too scared, though, he isn't injured, he doesn't look dead at any point, nor are we led to believe that he is.
Not in the sense that someone is taken to an entirely different place, but a kid is snatched right outside a building and taken inside the building, where he's held at gunpoint for a few minutes.
Not all-out, but a 12-year-old boy is sad about being much shorter and skinnier than his peers, especially because he's being bullied by bigger kids and rejected by a girl.
Yes, a (cliché) school bully mocks his victim - a 12-year-old boy - for crying from the bullying. Two grown men are obviously sad (teary-eyed and with ever so slightly quivering voices); no one ridicules them for it.
Some painful feelings are somewhat resolved in a bittersweet and very touching scene towards the end. The very last scene is wholly positive and optimistic, but that other scene hurt and stayed with me enough to overshadow the ending, so I'm answering yes.
Adam has a gunshot wound that’s pretty graphic with a lot of blood, however it’s only shown at the beginning of the movie. Adam also gets bloody noses from being punched.