I watched “The Bridge to Terabithia” on a whim with my wife and daughter with dinky foreknowledge of the set. I’d never read the Newbery Award-winning book by Katherine Paterson, and I’d seen only one trailer for the film, which left me with the impression it would be a Narnia knock-off. It’s not.
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I’m not dissing “The Chronicles of Narnia,” which in its scheme was a noteworthy film. But “Terabithia” didn’t deserve the CGI-laden marketing campaign it received; far from a fantasy blockbuster, this is a deep and thoughtful movie that places substance over sparkle — a rare treat in the sprawling field of youth-oriented theater. It ranks up there with one of my favorites, “The Secret of Roan Inish,” which accomplished more with no special effects than most family-friendly movies could with a billion-dollar budget.
But I honest can’t shake “Terabithia” from my head, a fact owed mostly to the performance of AnnaSophia Robb. As Leslie, a keen young girl with a fiery imagination and endless kindly cheer, AnnaSophia captured my heart. She’s the kind of person you want to know when you’re a child and, as my wife remarked midway through the film, she’s the sort of young woman you’d be blissful to recognize your daughter grow up to be.
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An outsider despite her youthful salubrious looks and family wealth, she finds her perfect match in Jesse (Joss Hutcherson), another outsider who has withdrawn into his art to flee a cool home life and his occupy problems at school. Together, they watch a secret getaway that might seem like a fairly ordinary patch of woods to most people; to them, it’s a magical world replete with extraordinary creatures, hidden dangers and wonderful triumphs. It’s here the special effects intrude more than accentuate the film; the anecdote would have benefited from a vaguer sense of Jesse and Leslie’s enjoy wonder. We don’t need to glance CGI creatures to absorb that these two children do.
The strength here, besides outstanding performances from the two lead actors, is the impact of a record that knows no amount of fantasy can prevent real-life tragedies from occurring. And the tragedy here — it’s hard to write about it without giving it away — slams into unsuspecting viewers like a sudden kick to the gut.
Parents of younger viewers should be prepared to have a long and serious talk with their children after this movie, but that’s not a recommendation to avoid it. “Terabithia” deserves to be seen, discussed and seen again. (Although exhaust some discretion; very young children should wait before seeing this.) My thanks to director Gabor Csupo, as well as writer Paterson, for giving kids something unbiased and sincere rather than another serving of high-energy fluff.
by Tom Knapp, Rambles.(n e t) editor
I read the unusual book The Bridge to Terabithia when I was a kid. I don’t remember very grand from the book, but I remembered the general premise and the ending. When I originally read it, I really liked the book. So, obviously, when hearing that they were making it into a movie, I was very skeptical. Most ample books don’t translate into marvelous movies. Then I saw the previews for the movie, and I was even more skeptical. This was not a book about fantasy lands and magical beings. This is no Chronicles of Narnia. I reflect it’s great better, but it’s certainly different.
This movie is about friendship, and imagination. It’s the tale of two fifth-graders, Jesse and Leslie, next-door neighbors, who are both outcasts. They aren’t readily common in school, and aren’t in appreciate with their home lives, either. They grow a posthaste friendship where they “recede” to an imaginary land, Terabithia. In reality, it’s unprejudiced the woods slow their houses. All of the CGI that you watch advertised is simply their imagination, and there’s really very small of it. Honest about every CGI-animated scene in the movie is shown in the previews. That is NOT what this movie is about, although that’s what Disney would have you possess. It’s about imagination and creativity, and how children should be encouraged to spend that imagination.
I have a quandary with all of the parents giving this movie dreadful reviews because they say it’s not child-appropriate. I don’t have an plan as to whether or not it’s appropriate for children, that’s for each individual parent to choose. Some kids can handle it, some can’t. It doesn’t prefer worthy research, however, to rep out that this is not the happiest of stories. Any parent who really cares about what their kids spy is going to research the movie BEFORE allowing their kids to watch it. That involves either looking it up online, asking friends who have already seen it (or read the book), or watching it themselves FIRST to conceal what their children discover. I will not waste the sage by saying what happens, but if you really want to know, consume five minutes doing some research. Read the other reviews on this page, for crying out loud. But if you bring your kids to a movie that you haven’t researched at all and it’s not what you examine, don’t blame the movie for your lack of difficulty. I understand Disney falsely advertised this movie, of course they did. Advertising it as another Chronicles of Narnia is certainly going to bring more sales in. But this movie is VERY Righteous. One reviewer said you have to be masochistic to bask in a movie like this. I don’t enjoy that’s right. You simply have to luxuriate in a well-told myth. Sometimes life sucks, and sometimes really dreadful things happen. That’s what the book was about, and this movie is faithful to that memoir.
I’m in my mid-twenties. When I went to peer this, I went with a few friends of mine, all of us adults. Every one of us loved it. The two main actors (the two kids) are REALLY capable. Jesse is the introvert and Leslie is the extrovert. You really retract into their friendship as you perceive them learn to know one another. You want Jesse to punch the bully in the face; you want Leslie to stand up to the eighth-grader.
By the waste, you could hear plenty of sniffles throughout the audience, including coming from my friends. Heck, I knew the record beforehand, and I peaceful teared up. It’s difficult to eye, but I own the account was handled with very distinguished care by Disney. Overall, this is an splendid movie, if not with reservations. If you’re concerned with what your children leer, then utilize some time and gain out what’s in the plotline. But this movie is really grand.
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