Recensione in evidenza
Even though Disney does have some very bad movies out there, there are still ones that are excellent. Tuck Everlasting was such a great film. The acting was great. William Hurt, Ben Kingsley, Sissy Spacek, Jonathan Jackson, Scott Bairstow, Amy Irving, Victor Garbor, Alexis Bledel are excellent in this movie. They are all such good actors/ actresses. The scenery was just beautiful. The music was very very pretty. I never read the book and I know there are probably changes in it from the movie, but as a movie lover I loved ever minute of it. This movie is for everyone. I recommend this movie to anyone who loves a good Disney movie or just a good family movie.
147 recensioni
I'll keep it brief - I appreciate this movie a whole lot. When I got it I really was expecting something different, so for the majority of the movie I was disappointed, considered the plot and characters mediocre. But the last two minutes of the movie made me rethink the entire thing, man... I can not promise you an amazing ending or anything like that, because most people probably saw it coming, all I can say for certain is that it sure did affect me. I thought it would just be all typical and uninteresting and everything but having a meaningfully strung conclusion like that set my head straight and made me see what it was all about. Now I can't wait to watch it again. I consider this movie a well done story with good acting and a nice enough plot. It has strong aesthetic value through it's good looking images/scenery, too. Of course it made me completely depressed. The stories that are supposed to be life-affirming are always the ones that make me the most depressed, "A Year of Impossible Goodbyes" was supposed to be a life-affirming adventure but it's the saddest book I've ever read!
- DeusExKatrina
- 8 gen 2005
- Permalink
'Tuck Everlasting' is one of those sweet movies with a lot of flaws you don't care about. You could ask question after question but I did not find a reason to do so. The story about an immortal family and a young teenager that comes into their lives is probably a well known story for some audiences, but I didn't know it. The immortal family exists out of father Angus Tuck (William Hurt), mother Mae (Sissy Spacek) and two sons named Miles (Scott Bairstow) and Jesse (Jonathan Jackson). The young teenager who is taken by the family so she can not reveal their secret is Winnie Foster (Alexis Bledel).
Although at first the family thinks Winnie needs to be killed, things change when Jesse Tuck and Winnie start to have feeling for one another. Winnie becomes a new member of the family. In the mean while we have Winnie's parents (played by Amy Irving and Victor Garber) looking for her. A man in a yellow suit (Ben Kingsley) is actually looking for the Tuck family but thinks he will find the girl with them as well. He knows how the Tucks have found their immortality and has plans for himself.
You can probably understand how many flaws a movie like this must have. There a couple of reasons we don't really want to ask too many questions. First of all it is a good thing the movie keeps the attention in the middle of everything. It does not really focus on the reason of immortality, it does not really focus on the relationship between Jesse and Winnie and it does not really focus on the outsiders like Winnie's parents and the Kingsley-character. Although that is not a good thing in most movies it works perfectly here.
Another reason you don't want to ask questions is Alexis Bledel together with Jonathan Jackson. They are sweet together, have some nice scenes. Although you sometimes see the Rory Gilmore of 'The Gilmore Girls' Bledel does a nice job with her Winnie Foster. Jonathan Jackson, who I only know from a small part in 'Insomnia', is a good choice for Jesse. This and three other respectable actors like Hurt, Spacek and Kingsley make sure the movie does not fail on that level.
All this together with a very nice score and some beautiful images make this a very good movie. It is perfect for the whole family. If you can forget the flaws, forget the question you might have, you must be able to fully enjoy this.
Although at first the family thinks Winnie needs to be killed, things change when Jesse Tuck and Winnie start to have feeling for one another. Winnie becomes a new member of the family. In the mean while we have Winnie's parents (played by Amy Irving and Victor Garber) looking for her. A man in a yellow suit (Ben Kingsley) is actually looking for the Tuck family but thinks he will find the girl with them as well. He knows how the Tucks have found their immortality and has plans for himself.
You can probably understand how many flaws a movie like this must have. There a couple of reasons we don't really want to ask too many questions. First of all it is a good thing the movie keeps the attention in the middle of everything. It does not really focus on the reason of immortality, it does not really focus on the relationship between Jesse and Winnie and it does not really focus on the outsiders like Winnie's parents and the Kingsley-character. Although that is not a good thing in most movies it works perfectly here.
Another reason you don't want to ask questions is Alexis Bledel together with Jonathan Jackson. They are sweet together, have some nice scenes. Although you sometimes see the Rory Gilmore of 'The Gilmore Girls' Bledel does a nice job with her Winnie Foster. Jonathan Jackson, who I only know from a small part in 'Insomnia', is a good choice for Jesse. This and three other respectable actors like Hurt, Spacek and Kingsley make sure the movie does not fail on that level.
All this together with a very nice score and some beautiful images make this a very good movie. It is perfect for the whole family. If you can forget the flaws, forget the question you might have, you must be able to fully enjoy this.
One of the things that I liked about Tuck Everlasting is that it conceded that in
the coming age secrets like what the Tuck family has would be harder to keep.
And the Tucks have a secret well worth keeping. They were at that time before World War I acknowledging the faster methods of communication and
transportation would make it impossible. In 2002 when the film was released
we are now passed the industrial age and into the age of communication.
You know someone would find out and post it on the web.
The secret of the Tucks is that they've found the secret of immortality in a spring located deep in the woods where they've settled. The family is parents William Hurt and Sissy Spacek and sons the brooding Scott Bairstow and the eternally youthful Jonathan Jackson.
The property however is owned by Victor Garber and Amy Irving and they've got a daughter Alexis Bledel whom they keep most sheltered. One day she wonders into the Tuck woods and meets the family. She nearly drinks from the spring and can't understand why the Tucks warn her away. But she experiences a first love with Jackson and they are a pair of the most romantic lovers you will ever meet.
It's a regular Garden of Eden the Tucks have, but there's a serpent there and it's in the form of Ben Kingsley. Kingsley has heard rumors of this fountain of youth and immortality and he's here to find it and exploit it as he feels that only certain people should enjoy immortality. As the film builds Kingsley grows more evil and more serpentine, he will really creep you out.
This film bears comparison to the Highlander movies and TV series and a bit of comparison to Sean Connery's science fiction classic Zardoz. All deal with immortality and what a trap it can be if you think about it. The Tucks have it better than Duncan McLeod, he can go if he's decapitated. A highland broadsword wouldn't even penetrate the skin of a Tuck.
Tuck Everlasting is really about Bledel and Jackson and a love that can never be. Scott Bairstow has an effective scene about the family he raised who have all gone and left him alone for an eternity.
Fitting that Tuck Everlasting should be a product of the Disney studios because the film has an aura of magic and it's fitting it come from the Magic Kingdom. It's a charming fantasy, you can't do much better with films of fantasy than this one.
The secret of the Tucks is that they've found the secret of immortality in a spring located deep in the woods where they've settled. The family is parents William Hurt and Sissy Spacek and sons the brooding Scott Bairstow and the eternally youthful Jonathan Jackson.
The property however is owned by Victor Garber and Amy Irving and they've got a daughter Alexis Bledel whom they keep most sheltered. One day she wonders into the Tuck woods and meets the family. She nearly drinks from the spring and can't understand why the Tucks warn her away. But she experiences a first love with Jackson and they are a pair of the most romantic lovers you will ever meet.
It's a regular Garden of Eden the Tucks have, but there's a serpent there and it's in the form of Ben Kingsley. Kingsley has heard rumors of this fountain of youth and immortality and he's here to find it and exploit it as he feels that only certain people should enjoy immortality. As the film builds Kingsley grows more evil and more serpentine, he will really creep you out.
This film bears comparison to the Highlander movies and TV series and a bit of comparison to Sean Connery's science fiction classic Zardoz. All deal with immortality and what a trap it can be if you think about it. The Tucks have it better than Duncan McLeod, he can go if he's decapitated. A highland broadsword wouldn't even penetrate the skin of a Tuck.
Tuck Everlasting is really about Bledel and Jackson and a love that can never be. Scott Bairstow has an effective scene about the family he raised who have all gone and left him alone for an eternity.
Fitting that Tuck Everlasting should be a product of the Disney studios because the film has an aura of magic and it's fitting it come from the Magic Kingdom. It's a charming fantasy, you can't do much better with films of fantasy than this one.
- bkoganbing
- 2 mar 2018
- Permalink
Like many other people on this website, I myself had to read the novel upon which this film is based when I was in the sixth grade. I really can't remember it that much, but seeing the movie brought some of it back to me.
The movie strays from Babitt's novel in some ways, as the "love" between two central characters is romanticized slightly. Otherwise, the story is not changed all that much, but there are still a few minor changes to the story that I could remember.
Most of the cast was perfect. Ben Kingsley fits the role of The Man in the Yellow Suit pretty well. Out of place kinda are Sissy Spacek and William Hurt who have the minority roles in this film. They were still quite good, though.
The story flows nicely, but there were still a few scenes that were different as I had envisioned. I pictured the Treegap Constable having a bigger role, and I also envisioned there to be more 19th century costume and prop designs. Just some things to be kept in mind when the next remake of this novel comes out in another thirty years or so.
TUCK EVERLASTING: 4/5.
The movie strays from Babitt's novel in some ways, as the "love" between two central characters is romanticized slightly. Otherwise, the story is not changed all that much, but there are still a few minor changes to the story that I could remember.
Most of the cast was perfect. Ben Kingsley fits the role of The Man in the Yellow Suit pretty well. Out of place kinda are Sissy Spacek and William Hurt who have the minority roles in this film. They were still quite good, though.
The story flows nicely, but there were still a few scenes that were different as I had envisioned. I pictured the Treegap Constable having a bigger role, and I also envisioned there to be more 19th century costume and prop designs. Just some things to be kept in mind when the next remake of this novel comes out in another thirty years or so.
TUCK EVERLASTING: 4/5.
- Jack the Ripper1888
- 9 mag 2003
- Permalink
Make no mistake: this is a nice movie, but it's one of those films you can't help but feel could have been so much better.
The first 20 minutes was very promising with spectacular scenery, overall cinematography and interesting characters. But, it started to slow down and then just bogged down more and more with a teen romance. Yes, it finished fairly well but unless you are a teen or 20-something young woman, I doubt this film will hold your interest.
Perhaps even for some women, this movie did not turn out as dramatically as it should have been. It's just too flat. Too bad; it looked like a "keeper' for awhile.
The first 20 minutes was very promising with spectacular scenery, overall cinematography and interesting characters. But, it started to slow down and then just bogged down more and more with a teen romance. Yes, it finished fairly well but unless you are a teen or 20-something young woman, I doubt this film will hold your interest.
Perhaps even for some women, this movie did not turn out as dramatically as it should have been. It's just too flat. Too bad; it looked like a "keeper' for awhile.
- ccthemovieman-1
- 7 set 2006
- Permalink
Winnie Foster(Alexis Bledel) is a free spirited young girl who is sick of living a boring life with her rich strict parents and one night after an argument with her parents Winnie runs away. She gets lost in a forest and stumbles upon Jesse(Jonathon Jackson). His family now takes Winnie with them because she has discovered a secret. That the Tuck's are immortal and that she can never ever tell anybody about that. Winnie and Jesse fall in love, and now Winnie must choose, will she go on and live her life like she is supposed to, or will she become immortal just like Jesse and spend forever with him? I thought this was a very beautiful movie, it is not just for kids like many people say. I think the whole family could enjoy this movie, it questions a lot of things people wonder about these days and it's just a really great magical fairytale. I would give Tuck Everlasting 10/10
- Darkest_Rose
- 11 mar 2003
- Permalink
- cnycitylady
- 2 mag 2016
- Permalink
When world-weary teen, Winnie Foster, finds herself lost in the woods of her wealthy family's estate, she stumbles upon a peculiar boy and his family whom immediately take her in as one of their own. However, a dilemma quickly forms when the confidentiality of a long-kept Tuck family secret is threatened. Winnie is forced to choose between returning to her dull, former life and staying with the Tucks forever.
"Tuck" possesses an appreciable theme about the circle of life, laying out some notable concepts about the fear of death and the consequences of immortality. Living forever would definitely, eventually suck... Wise of the writers to administer this lesson to young viewers while they still have a lot of life to look forward to. It's sort of brave of them and I admire that.
The film has an alluring, woodsy production design, incredibly fitting for its calm and lulling musical score. They draw you into the Tucks' plainly hidden territory and their peculiar, old-fashioned way of life... As I see it, the studio would have benefited greatly had the film been given a PG-13 rating, but Disney wouldn't release their first PG-13 film until a year later with "Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl".
"Tuck Everlasting" certainly had the star power to reach the box office potential of some of the more mature, subsequent, Disney films... The chemistry between Bledel and Jackson starts off a bit shaky, considering that they hadn't met prior to shooting more sentimental scenes, but I think that this was a wise Director choice. Winnie Foster (Bledel) initially doesn't trust the newly-acquainted Tucks and rightfully so; her character's shyness towards them is totally rational as are her moments of affection when she begins to gain confidence in them.
Ben Kingsley was a standout as the Man in the Yellow Suit, giving a compellingly uncanny performance ONYL to be BUMPED OFF in the SISSIEST way imaginable.
Nevertheless, "Tuck Everlasting" was a decent watch. It isn't gonna be in your top ten favorites list, but you could think of it as I do: background noise of the highest quality....72%.
"Tuck" possesses an appreciable theme about the circle of life, laying out some notable concepts about the fear of death and the consequences of immortality. Living forever would definitely, eventually suck... Wise of the writers to administer this lesson to young viewers while they still have a lot of life to look forward to. It's sort of brave of them and I admire that.
The film has an alluring, woodsy production design, incredibly fitting for its calm and lulling musical score. They draw you into the Tucks' plainly hidden territory and their peculiar, old-fashioned way of life... As I see it, the studio would have benefited greatly had the film been given a PG-13 rating, but Disney wouldn't release their first PG-13 film until a year later with "Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl".
"Tuck Everlasting" certainly had the star power to reach the box office potential of some of the more mature, subsequent, Disney films... The chemistry between Bledel and Jackson starts off a bit shaky, considering that they hadn't met prior to shooting more sentimental scenes, but I think that this was a wise Director choice. Winnie Foster (Bledel) initially doesn't trust the newly-acquainted Tucks and rightfully so; her character's shyness towards them is totally rational as are her moments of affection when she begins to gain confidence in them.
Ben Kingsley was a standout as the Man in the Yellow Suit, giving a compellingly uncanny performance ONYL to be BUMPED OFF in the SISSIEST way imaginable.
Nevertheless, "Tuck Everlasting" was a decent watch. It isn't gonna be in your top ten favorites list, but you could think of it as I do: background noise of the highest quality....72%.
- FINEZZERFILMZ
- 13 dic 2021
- Permalink
I can be a pretty cynical fella, but I had actually read the young adult novel this film is based on and really enjoyed it. The message of the book is brought to the screen and I was thoroughly impressed with the adaptation. A fine cast does great work and Ben Kingsley has a field day playing the mysterious Man In The Yellow Suit. The film is a little slow going in the beginning but all the strands and backstory must be laid out and once it gets going - the film moves with a beauty and tenderness that is rare. The music score is lovely as is the cinematography but overall, the message of the movie is what is special - it is not how LONG we live, but HOW we live. A beautiful film - for kids 9 and up.
- Hancock_the_Superb
- 23 giu 2003
- Permalink
When I was a child I read the book and it instantly became my favorite novel of all time, it remains this way till today. However this movie does not do the book justice in the least, drifting far from the original story line this movie is a catastrophe. All I can say is I now sympathize with my friend who said she was disappointed after seeing The Lord of The Ring: The Fellowship of the Ring.
- invalid_eVe
- 10 ott 2002
- Permalink
- Christian_Dimartino
- 3 ott 2010
- Permalink
Whilst the actors can be fully commended for their acting, I was very disappointed with the ending and in my opinion it ruined the whole film for me.
The fact that the family that drank from that magic spring could live forever is still not something which is unbelievable to readers/viewers, but the claimed fact (by the novelist) that the family could now be completely 'invincible' and 'immune' to being killed by pistol fire/hanging/lynching or any other form of harm is illusory at best.
Yes, if they were wounded by pistol bullets, then it is possible to have the wounds healed by the water from magic spring (along with having the bullet removed) but if the bullet pierced essential body parts such as the head or the heart then it is no longer possible for the person to remain alive for long. Just as in the Lord of the Rings where the Elves are immortal as long as they are not killed by orcs/trolls during battle.
Even if such a magic fountain existed in America, does one not think that it would have been discovered and extracted by the 20th or 21st century? Surely the Tucker family would have had hundreds of not thousands of descendants who in turn would continue to live at very long ages and therefore raise awareness in the wider American public of their secret? (Take for example, the story of Li Ching-Yuen who purportedly lived for 256 years of age, married 23 times, had 200 descendants, his centenary and bi-centenary were both celebrated by the local authorities whilst he was still alive and then he died in 1933).
Lastly, the female main character's choice at the end of the film to not choose to drink from the magic spring thinking that life would be 'boring' and 'meaningless' if they remained alive forever and she'd rather die after living a 'full life', than be immortal and forever stuck watching life pass her by. It gravely encourages Epicurean philosophical thinking which encourages people to "Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die".
Such a way of thinking is greatly flawed and assumes that one is better off being dead after living a 'meaningful life' than remaining alive forever. For those who are christians would recall from the Bible that Adam and Eve were not given a finite life by God by default and in fact were entitled to eat from the Tree of Life which would enable them to remain alive forever. It was the rejection of God's commands that lead them to become mortal in the flesh and their subsequent unhappiness, pains, hardships & suffering on earth.
There is no evidence to suggest that humans are not capable of enjoying a very happy and content life if granted the opportunity to become immortal (it would in fact be the very opposite unless that person happened to be a criminal in which case it would be better off for that person to live a shorter life). Christians believe that those who are eventually eligible to go to heaven would be immortal there because they would have the opportunity to eat from the Tree of Life in Heaven.
Hence the conceptual premises of this film are hugely flawed and would only be suitable for children or young teenagers (many of whom would be heart-broken and/or disappointed by the ending of this purely fictional story)
The fact that the family that drank from that magic spring could live forever is still not something which is unbelievable to readers/viewers, but the claimed fact (by the novelist) that the family could now be completely 'invincible' and 'immune' to being killed by pistol fire/hanging/lynching or any other form of harm is illusory at best.
Yes, if they were wounded by pistol bullets, then it is possible to have the wounds healed by the water from magic spring (along with having the bullet removed) but if the bullet pierced essential body parts such as the head or the heart then it is no longer possible for the person to remain alive for long. Just as in the Lord of the Rings where the Elves are immortal as long as they are not killed by orcs/trolls during battle.
Even if such a magic fountain existed in America, does one not think that it would have been discovered and extracted by the 20th or 21st century? Surely the Tucker family would have had hundreds of not thousands of descendants who in turn would continue to live at very long ages and therefore raise awareness in the wider American public of their secret? (Take for example, the story of Li Ching-Yuen who purportedly lived for 256 years of age, married 23 times, had 200 descendants, his centenary and bi-centenary were both celebrated by the local authorities whilst he was still alive and then he died in 1933).
Lastly, the female main character's choice at the end of the film to not choose to drink from the magic spring thinking that life would be 'boring' and 'meaningless' if they remained alive forever and she'd rather die after living a 'full life', than be immortal and forever stuck watching life pass her by. It gravely encourages Epicurean philosophical thinking which encourages people to "Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die".
Such a way of thinking is greatly flawed and assumes that one is better off being dead after living a 'meaningful life' than remaining alive forever. For those who are christians would recall from the Bible that Adam and Eve were not given a finite life by God by default and in fact were entitled to eat from the Tree of Life which would enable them to remain alive forever. It was the rejection of God's commands that lead them to become mortal in the flesh and their subsequent unhappiness, pains, hardships & suffering on earth.
There is no evidence to suggest that humans are not capable of enjoying a very happy and content life if granted the opportunity to become immortal (it would in fact be the very opposite unless that person happened to be a criminal in which case it would be better off for that person to live a shorter life). Christians believe that those who are eventually eligible to go to heaven would be immortal there because they would have the opportunity to eat from the Tree of Life in Heaven.
Hence the conceptual premises of this film are hugely flawed and would only be suitable for children or young teenagers (many of whom would be heart-broken and/or disappointed by the ending of this purely fictional story)
Even though Disney does have some very bad movies out there, there are still ones that are excellent. Tuck Everlasting was such a great film. The acting was great. William Hurt, Ben Kingsley, Sissy Spacek, Jonathan Jackson, Scott Bairstow, Amy Irving, Victor Garbor, Alexis Bledel are excellent in this movie. They are all such good actors/ actresses. The scenery was just beautiful. The music was very very pretty. I never read the book and I know there are probably changes in it from the movie, but as a movie lover I loved ever minute of it. This movie is for everyone. I recommend this movie to anyone who loves a good Disney movie or just a good family movie.
- iwatcheverything
- 2 set 2003
- Permalink
This is the saying I would give to this book/movie. It basscily describes it in one senctence. This book/movie educates why young readers why immortally is not all it's cracked up to be. It gives the older a sense of knowing that in the end ever thing will be all right. Plus It is a classic. Even though the movie strays from the book a little you still can appricate it. The movie allows the same story to be viewed from a older Winnie. I also liked it better in my younger years. In the book you see the story from an older Winnie. Both are enjoyable and both. teach the same moral. Both aren't soon forgotten after they are put back on the shelf.
- ponyboys-girl
- 23 ott 2006
- Permalink
- lisafordeay
- 26 mar 2020
- Permalink
In 1914, brothers Jesse Tuck (Jonathan Jackson) and Miles Tuck (Scott Bairstow) return to Treegap and their parents Angus (William Hurt) and Mae Tuck (Sissy Spacek) followed by a mysterious man (Ben Kingsley) in yellow. Winifred Foster (Alexis Bledel) is eager to live without the control of her parents (Amy Irving, Victor Garber). They own much of the forest. Winnie encounters Jesse in the woods drinking from a special spring. Miles kidnaps her back to the Tuck homestead.
It's a fine coming-of-age romance. It's very PG. It doesn't have great tension or more importantly, magic. This needs a sprinkle of that Disney magic. The young couple's romance is not that compelling and they are limited in the amount of heat. Their chemistry is strictly overwrought puppy love. There is a chance for a compelling ending reveal but the big reveal in the movie is not that compelling. It tries a little poetry and leaves it less than satisfying.
It's a fine coming-of-age romance. It's very PG. It doesn't have great tension or more importantly, magic. This needs a sprinkle of that Disney magic. The young couple's romance is not that compelling and they are limited in the amount of heat. Their chemistry is strictly overwrought puppy love. There is a chance for a compelling ending reveal but the big reveal in the movie is not that compelling. It tries a little poetry and leaves it less than satisfying.
- SnoopyStyle
- 12 ago 2016
- Permalink
I will start by saying that I have read the book and it is one of my all-time favorites. The movie stuck pretty close to the book, right down to several quotes taken from the book. There were a few changes that surprised me. For example, in the book, Miles is a mild mannered person. In the movie, he's extremely bitter because of what happened to him due to his immortality. (Sorry, no spoilers) It was a good change.
The casting was amazing. Alexis Bledel plays Winnie Foster. Like Rory on Gilmore Girls, Winnie is very serious, but wants to have fun. William Hurt didn't strike me as someone old and wise, but he portrays Angus Tuck very well. Sissy Spacek was great as Mae Tuck, showing her character's motherly side toward Winnie.
Ben Kingsley plays the Man in the Yellow Suit (TMITYS). TMITYS is a great villain in the same league as Lex Luthor. He has no superpowers, but his mere presence can send super humans (immortals) running for cover. In the book, he's a vague character. He doesn't even seem to be a villain until later in the book. All we know is that he wants to find the Tucks and their spring. In the movie, TMITYS is presented as a villain, and we find out more about what he wants and how he knows about the Tucks. Bravo, Mr. Kingsley!
One last thought... (I know I said 'no spoilers', so I'll be as discreet as I can.) Don't let the ending disappoint you. I told my cousin the end of the movie and she said it was a terrible ending. It wasn't terrible. One character just made a choice. I strongly recommend this movie to people of all ages.
The casting was amazing. Alexis Bledel plays Winnie Foster. Like Rory on Gilmore Girls, Winnie is very serious, but wants to have fun. William Hurt didn't strike me as someone old and wise, but he portrays Angus Tuck very well. Sissy Spacek was great as Mae Tuck, showing her character's motherly side toward Winnie.
Ben Kingsley plays the Man in the Yellow Suit (TMITYS). TMITYS is a great villain in the same league as Lex Luthor. He has no superpowers, but his mere presence can send super humans (immortals) running for cover. In the book, he's a vague character. He doesn't even seem to be a villain until later in the book. All we know is that he wants to find the Tucks and their spring. In the movie, TMITYS is presented as a villain, and we find out more about what he wants and how he knows about the Tucks. Bravo, Mr. Kingsley!
One last thought... (I know I said 'no spoilers', so I'll be as discreet as I can.) Don't let the ending disappoint you. I told my cousin the end of the movie and she said it was a terrible ending. It wasn't terrible. One character just made a choice. I strongly recommend this movie to people of all ages.
- jwhale9382
- 17 ott 2003
- Permalink
This film is a beauty to watch for the breathtaking photography alone. The blue and gold filters give a warm or cool sense in a somatic way that permeates the entire movie. Performances by Sissy Spacek and William Hurt are underplayed in a believable pattern.
This drama is a must not see. The adaptation of the story is superficial and those among us that seem to think the movie portrays rounded characters just haven't seen enough movies and certainly haven't read this novel. The length of the film alone (88 min.) can tell you that it is impossible to look into their souls. Jesse is the happy brother who wants to live and falls in love with Winnifred (his first love in a 104 years ??) Miles is the angry brother who wants to die. His wife ran away from him, with their two children because she didn't want to drink from the fountain of youth, because she thinks it's the devil's work and thus let their daughter Anna die of pneumonia at 15. Shouldn't he be just a little mad at her as well??? The father is the wise old man. He must be about a 150 and his sons are 104 and about a 115. They should be wise old men themselves by now. Or are we to believe that as the body doesn't grow older the mind doesn't either ? The mother is just the mother, loving and caring and protecting her family when she should. The man that hunts the Tucks is a Tuck himself. He's Miles his grandson but all he's interested in is making money of the spring. No-one else seems to care that he's family as well. Winnifred's character is the worst of all. She's a 10 year old trapped in a young woman's body. The other characters I won't even mention because they are even flatter than the above mentioned main characters from this weak screenplay. It's a very bad adaptation of Natalie Babbit's wonderful novel. In the book our naive Winnifred really is 10 years old. That's why she and Jesse only kiss. JEFFREY LIEBER, the one who is RESPONSIBLE for this bad screenplay, just was to lazy or lacks the talent to let the actions of Winnifred fit the age he has given her or was ordered by the studio to give her. This explains why the young woman in this film takes the challenge of playing some stickball in the beginning of the movie and why at the end of the movie she runs back to daddy instead of following her first true love. All and all the cinematography, the acting and the ending make up for the very very very bad screenplay, but not enough to change my mind about this film. It's just more infantile Hollywood-pulp that murdered a wonderful story. The 1980 British adaptation of this children's novel was a better one......
- elroy_geronimo
- 16 nov 2002
- Permalink
This is the best adaptation of a classic children's book I've seen in a very long time. Nearly everything in this film is just right. Of all the live-action films that Walt Disney produced in his lifetime, one he was very proud of was the 1960 POLLYANNA, and TUCK EVERLASTING reminded me of POLLYANNA in several key aspects. Like POLLYANNA, TUCK has a meticulous attention to period details (it takes place in 1914). Also like POLLYANNA, it has some high-powered acting talent in peripheral roles, with the main focus of the story on younger, less well-known actors. The cinematography is beautiful, with a rich interplay of light and shadow, and to best appreciate this aspect, you should try to see it in a theater with the brightest picture available. Like another classic children's book (CHARLOTTE'S WEB) TUCK EVERLASTING explores philosophical concepts of life and death and eternity that most adult films, much less children's films, ever touch on. I hope that TUCK doesn't end up comparable to POLLYANNA in one key area: lack of box-office success. Walt was extremely disappointed when, despite the loving attention he garnished on the film, audiences for the most part stayed away. TUCK EVERLASTING deserves to be a huge success. Hollywood has come under frequent criticism for not making enough family-friendly films, but it seems that when a rich, intelligent film does come out, it's ignored. I hope and pray that this one won't be.
- Goonies_girl
- 7 mar 2003
- Permalink
Tuck Everlasting is an adaptation of an acclaimed book into a underwhelming film. It is set in the early 1900s, The Tuck family have drank from a stream which has made them immortal and they have no aged. Jesse Tuck looks 17 years old despite being 104. So far so Twilight without any vampires about.
A teenage girl from a well to do family Winifred stumbles into the stream and sees Jesse drinking from there and he in order to keep the stream secret abducts her and they fall for each other as she finds out the family's secret. Why he keeps on drinking from the stream is never explained.
Winnie's family feared that she is kidnapped falls prey to a mysterious man in a yellow suit who has been tracking down the Tucks as he seems to know about their secret as well.
In the end Winnie must decide whether she drinks from the fountain of youth or live a normal life.
The film has three Oscar winning actors in Ben Kingsley, Sissy Spacek and William Hurt. Kingsley brings a bit of malevolence as the man in the yellow suit. Scott Bairstow as Jesse's brother brings a bit of pathos regarding the curse of immortality as he saw his wife being driven mad.
The film is bland and subdued. Its a bare bones story which does not work as a love story or a mystery. You have to applaud Twilight for making more from similar ingredients as it actually dealt better with a man trapped in a youth's body for decades, repeating high school every few years, not getting too close with people as they will one day age and die. Here you question what has the Tuck family done with their lives given they are immortal apart from just living life in the backwoods.
A teenage girl from a well to do family Winifred stumbles into the stream and sees Jesse drinking from there and he in order to keep the stream secret abducts her and they fall for each other as she finds out the family's secret. Why he keeps on drinking from the stream is never explained.
Winnie's family feared that she is kidnapped falls prey to a mysterious man in a yellow suit who has been tracking down the Tucks as he seems to know about their secret as well.
In the end Winnie must decide whether she drinks from the fountain of youth or live a normal life.
The film has three Oscar winning actors in Ben Kingsley, Sissy Spacek and William Hurt. Kingsley brings a bit of malevolence as the man in the yellow suit. Scott Bairstow as Jesse's brother brings a bit of pathos regarding the curse of immortality as he saw his wife being driven mad.
The film is bland and subdued. Its a bare bones story which does not work as a love story or a mystery. You have to applaud Twilight for making more from similar ingredients as it actually dealt better with a man trapped in a youth's body for decades, repeating high school every few years, not getting too close with people as they will one day age and die. Here you question what has the Tuck family done with their lives given they are immortal apart from just living life in the backwoods.
- Prismark10
- 29 mar 2015
- Permalink