'My Sister's Keeper' review

Only subtle compared to 'Transformers'

By Matt Pais

Metromix
June 25, 2009

 
Critic's Rating:
2 1/2

'My Sister's Keeper' review
Cameron Diaz and Sofia Vassilieva (Credit: Sidney Baldwin/Warner Bros.)
Photos:
Cameron Diaz and Abigail Breslin Cameron Diaz Abigail Breslin Sofia Vassilieva
My Sister's Keeper
Running time:
108 minutes
Rated:
PG-13
Cast:
Cameron Diaz -
Sara Fitzgerald
Abigail Breslin -
Anna Fitzgerald
Alec Baldwin -
Campbell Alexander
Sofia Vassilieva -
Kate Fitzgerald
Jason Patric -
Brian Fitzgerald
See full cast
Director:
Nick Cassavetes
Genre:
Drama
Official Movie Web Site:
http://www.mysisterskeepermovie.com/
Movie Trailer:
Overall User Rating:
5 (1 rating)
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"That's my sister Kate. She's dying," says 11-year-old Anna Fitzgerald (Abigail Breslin, solid), a loving sister who, after being conceived in a lab and spending her life donating tissue to fight Kate's leukemia, refuses to hand over her kidney. As the film jumps around in time from Kate's initial diagnosis to late-stage difficulties, Anna and her attorney (a badly miscast Alec Baldwin) sue her mom (Cameron Diaz) for "medical emancipation" to ensure that she can keep her organ.

The buzz: Director/co-writer Nick Cassavetes, who already had a hit tearjerker with 2004's "The Notebook," could do it again with his adaptation of Jodi Picoult's wildly popular novel. The question is if the movie can bring viewers inside the Fitzgerald family to truly experience what it's like to have a daughter/sister with cancer—or if the film will yank too hard on the heartstrings, and just express sorrow shorthand with a few tears and some blood.

The verdict: Feeling little for "My Sister's Keeper" doesn't mean you're insensitive to the plight of cancer patients and their families. It means you don't go for a movie that does little with its biggest ethical question (Is it wrong to have a child just for the sake of their bone marrow/kidney?), uses jumbled chronology to distance itself from the daily grind of a terminal disease and leans hard on pushy music that hits bottom with a laughably moody cover of "Girls Just Want to Have Fun." The absurd courtroom scenes nearly ruin the movie, which hits some authentic emotional notes but mostly tries so hard to check in with everybody (dad, brother, sister, mom, etc.) that it doesn't get close enough to anyone.

Did you know? Anna remarks that, "Most babies are products of drunken evenings and lack of birth control." Good thing 11-year-olds are the foremost experts on alcohol, birth control and pregnancy, or that statement might sound ridiculous.

What other people are saying...

No-pic-dude

meldevonne from madueria - September 11, 2009 at 5:07 PM

Horrible? The movie had me crying several times before the end. I was moved and I dont cry at movies. The movie moved me. I wasnt ready the emo...

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No-pic-chick

marydeth from Greensboro - July 26, 2009 at 9:30 AM

I agree with girlfry - the book showed us more in-depth the emotional hardship that this family had to experience. The movie just touched the surf...

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No-pic-chick

girlfry from Franklin Township - June 26, 2009 at 11:59 PM

This movie was horrible! I have read the book and was super excited to see the movie. I have read several books and then seen the movies after. ...

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