Tuck Everlasting is based on the award winning 1975 Natalie
Babbitt children’s novel of the same name.
(I’m not using the term “young adult” since that now conjures visions of
sparkly vampires and shirtless werewolves.)
I’m a little hesitant to discuss the central premise of the story since
it is kept a secret from the main character for about half the film, yet all
the marketing for the movie, and heck, even the title, pretty much lay it out
for the viewer. And the opening of the
movie also makes clear what is special about the Tuck family. So, I will be discussing it in the paragraphs
below so you can see if this family film is one you might want to watch.
This 2002 film is actually the second adaptation of the
story. There was an earlier one in
1981. I have not seen it, so I do not
know how it compares to the one I will be reviewing. If you have seen both, can you please let me
know what you thought of the 1981 version?
The 2002 version opens in the present day. A narrator (Elisabeth Shue) talks about the
nature of time and that for the Tuck family it didn’t exist. We see a teenage boy riding a motorcycle into
a small town called Treegap. He stops
before a large home and starts to reminisce.
The film then flashes back to 1914.
We see the town of Treegap
as it was back then. The present day
teenage boy, looking exactly the same, is walking along the street with another
man. They meet a woman, who joyfully
hugs them. This is Mae Tuck (Sissy
Spacek) and she is greeting her sons Jesse (Jonathan Jackson) and Miles (Scott
Bairstow). She has not seen them for ten
years. In fact, they make reference to
the fact that they always meet back in Treegap every ten years. Their apparent youth, plus the fact that we
saw Jesse in the present, tell us that this family somehow never ages – hence
the title “Tuck Everlasting”.
Also in town that day is Winnie Foster (Alexis Bledel). She is a teenage girl, who like every young
heroine of stories set in this period, is chafing at the restrictions of being
a “proper young lady”. Her rich mother
(Amy Irving) is horrified to leave a shop and find Winnie playing stickball
with some boys. Later, Winnie’s father
(Victor Garber) lets her know that they are planning to send her away to a girl’s
school for proper training in deportment.
Meanwhile, Mae, Jesse, and Miles have arrived at an old
cabin to meet the patriarch of the family, Angus Tuck (William Hurt.) They catch up with each other. It’s apparent that Miles is moody and depressed. He talks about going away to fight in a war
that he is sure is going to break out in Europe . He is also sure that he was being followed on
his way to Treegap. At a train station
he saw a mysterious man dressed all in yellow that appeared to be watching
him. Miles managed to give him the
slip. These two things worry Mae, who
takes out an old music box and turns the crank to play a soothing tune.
Winnie, standing at the fence on her property, is suddenly
greeted by someone – a man dressed all in yellow. The Man in the Yellow Suit (TMITYS), played
by Ben Kingsley, and not to be confused with The Man in the Yellow Hat from the
Curious George stories, tells her he is looking for some long lost
relatives. Before Winnie can answer, her
mother comes out and tells TMITYS to be on his way; that they don’t talk to
strangers. He obliges, and as he is
walking away he starts to whistle a tune – the same one from Mae’s music box.
Winnie has had enough and runs off into the woods. She finds Jesse, drinking from a spring under
a tree with a large T carved in it.
Jesse is startled and scared to see her.
They argue, but when she reveals she is lost he offers to lead her back
to town. She says she is thirsty and
wants to drink from the same spring.
Suddenly Jesse gets very scared and won’t let her. Winnie runs off in her own fright – right
into the arms of Miles. Miles tells
Jesse that he knows what they have to do.
Miles and Jesse bring Winnie back to their cabin where Mae tries to make
her comfortable. They have no intention
of letting her leave, though. Winnie is
scared because she doesn’t know what is going on.
Winnie’s father organizes some search parties and TMITYS
offers his services. He says he is very
good at finding people. He also says
that since he is trying to find his “long lost relatives”, the Tucks, he might
be able to accomplish both. Any man
whose name we never learn is never going to be up to purely good intentions, of
course.
Time passes with Winnie at the cabin. She has never met anyone like the Tucks. They don’t seem to be uptight about anything
and, except for Miles, they seem to enjoy life.
Mae lets drop that Miles used to be married, but that his wife and
children were now dead. Jesse leads
Winnie into the woods, showing her some of his favorite places. As you might expect, Winnie and Jesse start
to fall in love. When she asks him how
old he is he says “104”. She tells him
to be serious, so he says “17, or thereabouts.”
Winnie confesses her dreams for her life and Jesse finally confesses to
her about his family. They are
immortal. He really is 104 years
old. It is the spring that she saw Jesse
drinking from that caused this. The
Tucks can’t let anyone find out, though, because people would be killing each
other over the spring, not to mention hating the Tucks. The family had already been accused of
witchcraft when people noticed they didn’t age.
That’s why the family scatters and only comes back together every ten
years.
Jesse and his father both talk with Winnie. Jesse wants her to drink, too, so that their
love can be forever. Angus cautions her
that immortality is not a gift. Miles
saw his wife, who refused to drink because she thought it was the Devil’s work,
die in an insane asylum, as well as both of his children die from
ailments. In his grief he has fought in
every war that has come along, hoping that finally someone will be able to kill
him. Angus cautions Winnie that she
should really think hard before she decides if she wants to drink or not.
I won’t spoil how or why, but TMITYS tracks everyone down
and causes the Tucks quite a bit of problems.
Jesse tells Winnie he will come back for her “when it is safe.” The movie comes back to the present. We now know Jesse is in town to see if he can
find what happened to Winnie after nearly 90 years. Did she drink from the spring, and if so,
does she still love him?
This was the first time I had ever seen Alexis Bledel in
anything. She would have been around 20
when she filmed this and the way they dressed her and lit her, she is just
glowing with youth, vitality, and innocent beauty. And her eyes are the center of
everything. On a later film she did –
Sin City (you can read my review here) – directors Robert Rodriguez and Frank
Miller presented the film mostly in black and white with a few splashes of
color. One of the things they left in
color was Bledel’s eyes. In the
commentary for the film Miller even remarked that he would get so distracted by
her eyes that he would catch himself just staring at them while she was
shooting a scene.
Tuck Everlasting is a family film, but that doesn’t mean
that it is cloying or simplistic. It
presents a great question – if you could choose immortality, would you? As the movie shows, it is not without its
drawbacks. The film also sends the
message that you should live life to the fullest, regardless of your
situation. If this sounds interesting
then I recommend you give Tuck Everlasting a try.
Chip’s Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
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I remember seeing this one. I thought it was a pretty good film. It was a very sweet story. Alexis Bledel was perfectly cast. She had a sweet charm that made this movie.
ReplyDeleteThat said, I was quite shocked when she was in 'Sin City.' She didn't seem to fit into that movie well. Perhaps I was just remembering her role in 'Tuck Everlasting.'
"Alexis Bledel was perfectly cast. She had a sweet charm that made this movie."
DeleteI agree.
For some reason I didn't have a reaction to her character in Sin City. Perhaps it was because there were so many other characters that were more extreme.
Think I'll watch it! Thanks for the review.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome. I hope you enjoy it.
DeleteThanks for becoming a Follower. Based on your Women Writing Strong Women site I think you'd be interested in the book The Eight by Katherine Neville, if you have not already read it. It was the first book I ever reviewed here. You can read my review at this link: http://tipsfromchip.blogspot.com/2010/12/book-eight.html
or by going into my Index of Books Reviewed (link on upper right.)