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Movie Review: Stepmom

From our provider: CommonSenseMedia
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Common Sense Rating: PAUSE for ages 12+ Stars: 3 out of 5 (About Common Sense Ratings)
MPAA Rating: PG-13  language and thematic elements  MPAA Rating: PG-13  Studio: Tristar Pictures  Directed By: Chris Columbus  Cast: Ed Harris, Julia Roberts, Susan Sarandon  Running Time: 124 min  Release Date: 10/01/1999  Genre: Drama 

What Parents Should Know
Parents should know that this film tackles some very grim topics: divorce and death. Though the characters are shown grappling realistically with real problems and doing the best they can in bad situations, the mere fact that the mother in the movie is dying will be too much for younger and very sensitive children. There is some light swearing, drinking, and a character smokes pot to deal with chemotherapy.

Families can talk about how the characters cope with divorce and a death in the family. Do you think their reactions are realistic or too Hollywood? For kids who have experienced either event, what's missing in this movie? Is there a movie you can think of that's more realistic?

Common Sense Media Review
At every step of STEPMOM, audiences feel director Chris Columbus pulling the strings. The plot twists are as contrived as the swelling strings that fill the soundtrack, engineered in some Hollywood lab to jerk the tears right out of you. And yet it works, mostly due to the stellar acting on display.

The set-up is simple: Jackie Harrison ( Susan Sarandon) is unhappily divorced from Luke ( Ed Harris), who's now shacking up with fashion photog Isabel ( Julia Roberts), with the two kids shuttled in between the two homes. At first Isabel and Jackie are bitter rivals, and the kids side with Mom. But when Jackie develops fatal cancer, Isabel has to start taking up the slack in the Mommy role.

Julie Roberts is predictably glowing, Susan Sarandon is confident and real, and the little nippers ( Jena Malone and Liam Aiken) are so genuine that it's easy to forget that you're being pulled this way and that by the filmmakers, like a puppet on a string. It's manipulative. But there's enough polish on the film that it works.

Ultimately, this is depressing but entertaining, a solid choice for a rainy night when no one feels like laughing.

Families who enjoy this film may like other three-handkerchief family films like Terms of Endearment , or -- another Julia Roberts film -- Steel Magnolias .



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