Résumés(1)

Pour sauver leur petite Kate, atteinte de leucémie, Sara et Brian Fitzgerald n'ont d'autre choix que de concevoir un nouvel enfant génétiquement compatible avec elle. Pour les Fitzgerald – Sara en particulier – aucune question morale ou éthique ne saurait empêcher de tout faire pour sauver leur fille. Bientôt, Kate a une petite sœur, Anna. Kate et Anna grandissent en partageant un lien plus étroit que bien des sœurs. Les deux petites multiplient traitements médicaux et séjours à l'hôpital, mais leur vie est heureuse au sein d'une famille unie. Sara a abandonné sa carrière d'avocate pour soigner sa fille, et se perd parfois dans ce rôle envahissant auquel elle consacre toute sa vie. Son mari la soutient, souvent dépassé par la détermination de sa femme. Et leur fils, Jesse, se sent un peu abandonné... C'est à l'âge de 11 ans qu'Anna ose dire non. Cherchant à se libérer de ce carcan médical et familial, elle engage son propre avocat et attaque en justice. L'affaire divise la famille, et c'est la vie même de Kate qui est en jeu... (Metropolitan FilmExport)

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Critiques (7)

Zíza 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Totally weepy movie, I was kind of expecting this ending, but that's okay. I kind of envy the siblings their relationship, my sister and I will never have one that nice, but maybe it's generated by the disease, if it hadn't broken out maybe they wouldn't all be so nice to each other... who knows. But there were moments that I didn't love – like a relationship between two sick people, I was just waiting for the grim reaper to come knocking. I was kind of thinking towards the end of the movie: "Die already." And when it happened, I didn't even cry, there were other things I thought were sadder. Somewhat of a weak 4 stars. ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais This film left me with only negative feelings, I haven’t seen anything less likeable for quite some time. My Sister´s Keeper is emotional blackmail in its purest form and I consider it a personal success that it didn’t affect me. In “dead serious” dramas, children should never be more mature than adults, period. The actors and the direction are excellent, though. ()

Annonces

Pethushka 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais This story of a beautiful family made me cry. At first I felt sorry for Anna, who was actually a victim and was about to start losing her sense of self-importance. It was incredible how "adult" she was about it. Aside from the pain she had to endure in order to give a "piece of herself" to her older sister, at 11 years old she had to understand her mother, who out of fear for one daughter forgot she had two. The moment when the little girl stands in the courtroom and fights against her mother was the saddest moment ever. The role of the mom accurately describes what a loving parent can become when their child suffers. She gradually loses not only her daughter, but her life and her rational thinking. Great cast: Abigail Breslin and Sofia Vassilieva. And I dare say it was Cameron Diaz's best film. ()

gudaulin Boo !

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais In the distant past, Hollywood producers discovered that betting on children is a sure bet. Adorable cunning little girls in the 1930s reconciled quarrelsome parents and mended family disputes. Clever boys with lots of ideas and unwavering enthusiasm saved family businesses from decline. The genre improved, and already clever children became even smarter, until it reached today's sad endings, when girls assign tasks to lawyers and give lessons in psychology and ethics to the adult world. Emotional blackmailing has been done in many movies, but this title took it to the extreme. It is so transparently manipulative that not only does it not work on me, but it literally offends me. It ruined my mood for a very long time and I will not be even a bit merciful towards it. Go to hell with this overused kitsch. Overall impression: 0 out of 0. ()

Kaka 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais You are watching a melodramatic film about the cohesion of a family in difficult life situations, in which delicate piano plays in sunlit shots, and heavy scenes are filled with emotions. You almost want to say that it's just another Hollywood template, but then you realize that Nick Cassavetes has everything under control, and in certain aspects, even in the banal and clichéd themes and scenes – however schematic they may be – it is his own, sufficiently heartfelt, unobtrusive, intellectual, and emotionally wrenching style, ruling in a very similar way as in The Notebook. Cameron Diaz plays her heart out. ()

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