Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzu"My Last Love" is a TV-movie about a single mother who had been diagnosed with cancer. Her treatments aren't helping, so she decides to move with her daughter Carson from Chicago to her chil... Alles lesen"My Last Love" is a TV-movie about a single mother who had been diagnosed with cancer. Her treatments aren't helping, so she decides to move with her daughter Carson from Chicago to her childhood home on the West Coast. While there, she meets a busboy named Michael and they fall ... Alles lesen"My Last Love" is a TV-movie about a single mother who had been diagnosed with cancer. Her treatments aren't helping, so she decides to move with her daughter Carson from Chicago to her childhood home on the West Coast. While there, she meets a busboy named Michael and they fall in love. In the meantime, she has several struggles dealing with Carson's reaction to her ... Alles lesen
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Gewinn & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
- Zachary
- (as Merrill Holtzman)
- Carson Morton
- (as Jamie Renee Smith)
- Emma
- (as Alessandra Toreson)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The story is of Susan, a woman in her late thirties/early forties suffering from cancer who moves with her daughter from Chicago to California because she wants to be close to home and her parents when she dies. She doesn't want her parents, loving but controlling people, raising her 11-year-old, Carson, but has no one else. In California, she meets Michael, a 26-year-old busboy with no goals who she takes to be a fluffy airhead. Much to her surprise, he turns out to be intelligent and, as she puts it, "has depth." After learning of her condition, Michael tries to run from the mother and daughter, but moves on to become an integral part of their lives, providing both with true love as Susan prepares to die.
These were honest-to-goodness three-dimensional characters, who grew and learned over the course of the movie. The emphasis was on people surviving difficult situations and growing beyond themselves. The one plot point that could have spiraled into maudlin triteness was the obligatory custody battle, but instead was turned into a chance for all concerned to grow as characters, and was handled more tastefully than any such situation handled on film in years.
I will say it again--I was floored by the honesty and truth in this made-for-TV movie.
Nancy Travis, Scott Bairstow and the girl that played the daughter give stunning performances. All are complex and multi-faceted and will truly surprise you.
Watch this movie. What could have been a sappy movie-of-the-week instead stands as a true work of film.
"My Last Love" is a life story about true love and a love story about true life. This movie, to me, showed that if you truly love someone nothing can take it from you. You can find your best friend and soulmate in anyone. Love knows no age. Love knows no illness. If you are fortunate enough to find it, grab onto it and hang on with everything you've got. Don't give it up for anyone. Five minutes of being really loved is worth whatever risks you have to take. True love lasts beyond a lifetime.
Superbly written, directed and acted, this tender story is a must-see for anyone who believes in love.
Although the performances are above average, the things we see in this movie are disturbing and not for the obvious reasons of this being a "terminally-ill-mother disease of the week" movie. The daughter is a spoiled, precocious, angry child who is incredibly fresh to her mother. Granted, this was made in the late 1990s but even at my age, I would never think to speak to my mother or my grandparents the way this child speaks to her relatives. This really disturbed me and I did not and do not excuse it because the child's mother is dying.
Another disturbing thing is that this woman is living with a man who is neither her husband nor her daughter's father. Again, I realize this movie was made in the 1990s but a man and woman living together without being married but with a child in the house causes me some qualms.
Finally, there is the stereotypical "single mother vs. the old 'square' parents" (Susan's parents, played so well by character actors James Karen and Holland Taylor). Susan is a free-spirited professional woman who has had a couple of boyfriends after her divorce from Carson's father. Her parents, meanwhile, are portrayed as stuffed shirts who -- god forbid -- want their granddaughter to look like a feminine little girl instead of like a "member of a gang." Finally, Susan's parents want custody of Carson when Susan dies but instead, Susan sees to it her boyfriend gets custody. Maybe this is the "modern" thing to do but that doesn't make it right.
The last half hour of this movie is a little more universal - a dying woman asks her mother if she really loves her. This same woman then tells her daughter she is enough, to keep her heart open and to always be true. These are universal lessons and were told wonderfully in an incredible acting by However, we could have done without the modern morality tale and then it would have been worthy of being compared to "Terms of Endearment" or "Message from Holly."
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesAlessandra Torresani's debut, playing the character "Emma."