Tuesdays with Morrie Movie Review
Tuesdays with Morrie Review
"Tuesdays with Morrie" Overview

Rating: PG
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Mick JacksonProducer : Kate Forte,Susan Heyer,Jennifer Ogden,Oprah Winfrey
Screenwiter : Tom Rickman
Starring : Jack Lemmon,Hank Azaria,Wendy Moniz,Caroline Aaron
I didn’t read Mitch Albom’s book, Tuesdays With Morrie, which spent about two
jillion years on the bestseller lists. But based on the movie, I can see why
so many people bought the book and why it’s ripe for criticism.
As Brandeis University professor Morrie Schwartz’s body deteriorated from Lou
Gehrig’s Disease, former student Albom decided to record the man’s thoughts on
an array of topics. If the movie is anything like the book, then Morrie sounds
like the world’s foremost pop psychologist.
And that’s part of the problem I had watching the adaptation. Albom claims
that Morrie was “a force” in the classroom, but he gets stuck saying things
like “once you learn how to die, you learn how to live.” Albom is certainly a
happier person for having talked to his teacher, but I get the feeling he could
have rented Old Yeller or watched a few self-help infomercials and came out OK.
Sarcastic comments aside, I can’t fault a made-for-TV movie that has sturdy,
sensitive performances and good intentions. If I can be taught about the
values of life and not want to smack any of the characters upside the head,
then the movie can’t be all that bad.
Hank Azaria (The Birdcage) plays Albom, a work-obsessed Detroit sportswriter
who is constantly on the go. His world stops when he sees a news special
profiling Morrie’s condition. Some 15 years after promising to keep in touch
and not doing so, Albom decides to visit his professor. Pretty soon, they
regularly meet on Tuesdays--Morrie’s old office hours.
Jack Lemmon plays Morrie, a man whose indomitable spirit is still whole
regardless of the medical obstacles he faces. It’s a role that could have been
played like a geriatric Patch Adams, but Lemmon (one of the best actors of his
generation) handles the role with grace.
Azaria, always an undervalued actor, does a good job and even sounds a bit like
Albom, a regular on ESPN. Azaria has always had a slightly cynical streak to
him that makes him more human. That trait serves him especially well in this
occasionally sudsy, but overall entertaining fare.
Reviewer: Pete Croatto



