Ryan Reynolds has opened up about his parenting style, noting that he is happy if his kids finish a bowl of cereal and he doesn't pressurize them to get better grades.

Reynolds, who attended the red carpet of his upcoming Netflix movie, "The Adam Project," with his wife Blake Lively, shared that the movie is not only about time travel but also about parenting and the importance of family, ET reported.

"I think I would be psychotic if I didn't want my children to at least, you know, try to do something right and with integrity," he said. The 45-year-old actor further explained that his three kids - James, 7, Inez, 5, and Betty, 2, are very young and he is happy if they finish their bowl of cereal.

"But my kids are 7, 5, and 2, so I'm not like, 'You gotta get better grades!' I mean, I'm just happy if they finished a bowl of cereal," he explained.

Reynolds also joked that he and his wife Lively have "probably like a brown belt at this point?" when it comes to parenting style. "I don't know. We're working up the chain of command," he added.

"The Adam Project" revolves around a fighter pilot Adam Reed who time travels to the past and meets his past to save the future. The flick also stars Jennifer Garner, Mark Ruffalo, Zoe Saldana and Catherine Keener.

Considering the movie's plot, the actor was asked if he would love to time travel in reality. "I would be more curious to see what the future holds than the past," the actor replied. "I mean, in the past you'd spend so much timing dealing with so many things that are broken or wrong. I think in the future, I would just sort of see if something landed right, you know?"

Netflix shared a three-minute, 55 seconds clip from the movie last week featuring a scene where 12-year-old Adam meets the old Adam.

"The Adam Project" is slated to release on March 11 on Netflix. The movie is helmed by director Shawn Levy.

Canadian actor Ryan Reynolds (pictured) co-owns Wrexham with fellow actor Rob McElhenney
Canadian actor Ryan Reynolds (pictured) co-owns Wrexham with fellow actor Rob McElhenney AFP / ANGELA WEISS