Bridge to Terabithia Movie Review
Bridge to Terabithia Review

"Bridge to Terabithia" Overview

Rating: PG
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Gabor CsupoProducer : Lauren Levine,Hal Liberman,David Paterson
Screenwiter : Jeff Stockwell,David Paterson
Starring : Josh Hutcherson,AnnaSophia Robb,Zooey Deschanel,Robert Patrick,Bailee Madison
One wonders if the makers of Bridge to Terabithia actually have something
against all the people who loved reading Katherine Paterson's award-winning
book as children. The original story, which deals with loneliness, isolation,
and the importance of friendship, is now -- thanks to a cloying screenplay by
Jeff Stockwell and the book's author's son David Paterson -- little more than
an anodyne valentine to the power of the imagination or some such cliché
popular among vulgarizers of young adult literature. You could ask, why can't
they just leave well enough alone? The answer, unfortunately, is they never do.
A great many problems with Bridge to Terabithia could have been solved by
casting, and unfortunately director Gabor Csupo gets that wrong from the start.
The protagonist, Jesse Aarons, a lonely fifth grader in a small town, is played
with sullen inattention by Josh Hutcherson. His better half is Leslie Burke,
the new girl in town, performed by AnnaSophia Robb with a bright and shallow
perkiness that suggests a callow Keira Knightley 10 years ago. With not much
going in the way of interpersonal chemistry between the two leads, it's
difficult for the film's rather (on the surface) uneventful and deeply interior
story to gain much traction.
The gist of the matter is that both Jesse and Leslie are pretty miserable, as
is the lot of many isolated fifth graders. They're both picked on by bullies
and their respective home lives are less than great -- Jesse's parents are
working all the time when they're not yelling at him, and Leslie's mom and dad
are self-involved writers who barely notice when she's not there. As a means of
escape, the two spend their days after school let out back in a deep patch of
woods near their houses, reachable only by a rope swing over a turbulent creek.
Back there, in a falling-down treehouse, they create the imaginary world of
Terabithia, filled with magical creatures, a Dark Lord, and the occasional
battle with the forces of evil. Beats geometry homework.
A major concern among fans of the book is that the backers of the film (Disney,
as well as Christian media group Walden, which is behind the Narnia films)
would turn the story into a special effects extravaganza; this at least didn't
happen. The CGI scenes that Csupo enlists to graphically illustrate the fantasy
life of Jesse and Leslie are kept thankfully brief. The heart of the film is
indeed supposed to be Jesse and Leslie's friendship -- as well as the
surprising (at least for those not familiar with the book) tragedy that turns
the movie on its head near the end -- and it's not the fault of the special
effects that this heart is simply not beating.
For Bridge to Terabithia to work at all, it needed a strong dose of something
that is simply not here. The brightly generic camerawork, cliché-clogged
screenplay, flat acting styles (though character actors like Robert Patrick and
Zooey Deschanel do decent work in small roles), and a couple preachy nods to
the wonders of religion reduce this potentially heartbreaking tale to something
cheap and ordinary. This isn't art, it's product.
No running on the bridge.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti




