Shared Darkness
A Communal Life in Film and DVD, Examined

Bridge to Terabithia

Print the article

This entry was posted on 6/29/2007 1:24 AM and is filed under DVD Reviews.


Reserved 11-year-old Jess Aarons (Zathura’s Josh Hutcherson) is a bit of an outsider — both at school and, as the only boy among five siblings in a working-class family of seven, at home as well. When he strikes up a friendship with the quirky new girl in his small town, Leslie Burke (AnnaSophia Robb, from Because of Winn-Dixie and The Reaping), she introduces him to a world of imagination. Together they create the secret kingdom of Terabithia, a magical place only accessible by swinging on an old rope over a stream in the woods near their homes. There they play-act a series of fantastical escapades against figurative representations of school bullies and, in the process, change each other for the better.

Based on Katherine Paterson’s popular Newbery Award-winning novel, Bride to Terabithia is part family drama, part adolescent fantasy – a movie about friendship, as well as about the power and exhilaration of a blossoming imagination. Beautifully fleshed out in non-pandering fashion by screenwriters John Stockwell and David Paterson, and directed with a clear, streamlined tone by Emmy Award-winning producer Gabor Csupo (The Simpsons), the film mines a deep reservoir of genuine feeling that’s often missing in adolescent entertainment, combining it with just the right amount of sensory pleasures. Robb and Hutcherson are warm and engaging; the conflicts, schemes and resolutions are also all believably to scale, resulting in a winning piece of family-friendly entertainment.

Housed in a regular Amray case with a raised-print, hard-stock cardboard slipcover, Bridge to Terabithia is presented on DVD in anamorphic widescreen, preserving the aspect ratio of its theatrical presentation. Two separate audio commentary tracks headline the slate of bonus materials — one from director Csupo, writer Stockwell and producer Hal Leiberman, the other from cast members Hutcherson and Robb, and producer Lauren Levine. Depending on what sort of information you most want to hear — pre-production back story or goofy production anecdotes — each is worthy in its own right. A six-minute featurette on the movie's special effects work — by Weta Digital, the visionary, Oscar-winning digital arthouse that created the visual masterpiece of Middle Earth in the Lord of the Rings trilogy — is a worthwhile inclusion, while "Keep Your Mind Open," a music video featuring Robb, is pure fluff. Rounding things out is a solid little 15-minute production featurette, including interviews with novelist Paterson and cast and crew members. A- (Movie) B+ (Disc)

 del.icio.us  Stumbleupon  Technorati  Digg 

 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
Trackback specific URL for this entry
  • No trackbacks exist for this entry.
Comments
    • No comments exist for this entry.
Leave a comment

Submitted comments will be subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Enter the above security code (required)

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.