Scene from 'My Sister's Keeper'.
Hearing voices, seeing stars...
> My Sister's Keeper
Director: Nick Cassavetes
Cast: Abigail Breslin, Cameron Diaz, Alec Baldwin,
Jason Patric, Joan Cusack, Sofia Vassilieva, Heather
Wahiquist, Evan Ellingson, David Thornton, Thomas Dekker
Rating: M
1 star (out of 5)
Reviewed By Christine Powley
Lots of people love the angst-filled novels of Jodi Picoult
and lots love a great weepy movie, so merging the two should
be a success. Sadly, the insipid mess that is the filmed
version of My Sister's Keeper (Rialto) does not
deliver.
Director Nick Cassavetes had great success with another
classic weepy, The Notebook, but that was a romantic
weepy which suited his tasteful soft-focus style. My
Sister's Keeper is a tragic-disease weepy and fade-outs
do not work here.
My Sister's Keeper works so hard to treat a painful
subject tastefully that it ends up failing to convince us any
of it matters.
Kate (Sofia Vassilieva) has been battling cancer since she
was 5. Her tough-love mum Sara (Cameron Diaz) has kept her
alive through an effort of will that has left the rest of the
family hopelessly looking on.
Sara even had another child, Anna (Abigail Breslin) to act as
a perfect donor for Kate. It has all worked up to a point but
10 years on Kate's kidneys are shot and Anna has had enough.
This being America she hires a dodgy lawyer, Campbell
Alexander (Alec Baldwin), who sues her parents for medical
emancipation.
This movie should be emotionally searing but contents itself
with slow montages and voice-overs. With its confused
timeline it is virtually unwatchable, despite some fine
performances.
Best thing: Joan Cusack as the judge with her own
emotional issues becomes the unintentional heart of the movie
simply by the camera staying on her.
Worst thing: Enough with the voice-overs. Instead of
talking to each other, the entire family talks to us.
See it with: Fortitude.
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