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Riding the Bus with My Sister

  • Fernsehfilm
  • 2005
  • PG
  • 1 Std. 37 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
3,6/10
1422
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Andie MacDowell and Rosie O'Donnell in Riding the Bus with My Sister (2005)
Drama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAfter their father's death, a woman spends time with her developmentally-disabled sister.After their father's death, a woman spends time with her developmentally-disabled sister.After their father's death, a woman spends time with her developmentally-disabled sister.

  • Regie
    • Anjelica Huston
  • Drehbuch
    • Rachel Simon
    • Joyce Eliason
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Rosie O'Donnell
    • Andie MacDowell
    • Richard T. Jones
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    3,6/10
    1422
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Anjelica Huston
    • Drehbuch
      • Rachel Simon
      • Joyce Eliason
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Rosie O'Donnell
      • Andie MacDowell
      • Richard T. Jones
    • 61Benutzerrezensionen
    • 2Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos1

    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung32

    Ändern
    Rosie O'Donnell
    Rosie O'Donnell
    • Beth Simon
    Andie MacDowell
    Andie MacDowell
    • Rachel Simon
    Richard T. Jones
    Richard T. Jones
    • Jesse
    D.W. Moffett
    D.W. Moffett
    • Rick
    Roberta Maxwell
    Roberta Maxwell
    • Valerie
    Peter Cockett
    Peter Cockett
    • Sam
    Tom Barnett
    Tom Barnett
    • Bobby
    Jayne Eastwood
    Jayne Eastwood
    • Estella
    Stephanie Morgenstern
    Stephanie Morgenstern
    • Olivia
    Allegra Fulton
    Allegra Fulton
    • Vera
    Boyd Banks
    Boyd Banks
    • Henry
    Shauna MacDonald
    Shauna MacDonald
    • Nona
    Simon Reynolds
    Simon Reynolds
    • Morris
    Vijay Mehta
    Vijay Mehta
    • Pradlip
    Diane Bald
    • Art Dealer
    Charles Officer
    Charles Officer
    • Xaxier
    Jazzmin Parker
    • Young Beth
    Emily Swiss
    • Young Rachel
    • Regie
      • Anjelica Huston
    • Drehbuch
      • Rachel Simon
      • Joyce Eliason
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen61

    3,61.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    vchimpanzee

    Very good, especially O'Donnell

    Beth is mentally challenged and can't hold a job, but she is able to live by herself, with some help from her father. Her favorite activity is riding the various buses in her city, and she considers many of the bus drivers to be friends (Eugene is an exception), as well as a number of passengers. Some of the passengers, though, find her annoying and wish she would get a job and stop living off the government. Beth also has a boyfriend Jesse who is a lot like her but can work. Beth is white and Jesse is black, but this doesn't seem to be shown as a problem.

    Beth's sister Rachel has a fast-paced career as a big-city fashion photographer. She has to put her life on hold when the girls' father dies, because someone has to make sure Beth is taken care of. Otherwise Beth will end up in a group home, which she doesn't want to do again. There is a brother and a stepmother (and a mother who has long since lost any chance of reviving a relationship with her daughters), but Rachel ends up having to take the responsibility. This puts her relationship with her boyfriend at risk.

    I find Rosie O'Donnell annoying when she is being herself or playing a character like her. Beth was ten times worse, at first. But seeing how much almost everyone cared about her made me feel the same way, and I soon felt bad whenever Beth was mistreated. O'Donnell effectively showed not only the normal behavior of someone mentally disabled, but she did quite well in unusual situations. And she carefully showed a tic that Beth often had before speaking.

    Andie MacDowell also did quite well as the flawed but appealing character of Rachel. Rachel could be impatient and somewhat selfish, but her concern for her sister won out. D. W. Moffett also stood out as Beth's favorite bus driver Rick.

    Some unsettling but effective flashbacks to the girls' early life showed the events that helped lead to who they became.

    Overall, this was well done.
    1MarieGabrielle

    Give the audience some credit....

    for intelligence. Tripe like this again falls into a category where a mediocre actor (O'Donnell), with money and too much fame, feels like doing something altruistic (a TV movie) and pretends to have one iota of medical knowledge or empathy (she was on several talk shows, discussing Asperger syndrome) and she even mis-pronounced it!.

    Why, oh why do we in the US have to be subjected to this garbage?- In Europe, I do not see the TV being inundated with mediocre TV actors/talk show hosts. Actors seem to know their place, and concentrate on art, not media hype, curing cancer, or discussing mental illnesses (which they have no business doing).

    I see I am not the only reviewer sick of this trend; Do not waste your valuable time or money on this film. It is not educational, is mere publicity fodder for O'Donnell to add another notch on her "social consciousness" belt. Enough already. 0/10.
    3toddreeder-241-635878

    Not a good movie.

    I did not like the movie because it did not have much of an ending. And because there was no real resolution between Beth and Rachel. Rachel went back to new york and got on with her life while Beth stayed where she was and her life remained the same. It would have been a better ending if Beth and Jesse moved in with each other and lived together. And if Rachel would have done something to help her sister to have a real life. Some of the people on the bus were right in a way. Beth should have got a life. There likely something she could have done as an occupation. She needed to learn if possible when to keep quiet and not say certain things. There is a lot she needed to learn and the system was not helping her learn. She had a case worker. But no indication she was helping her get a life.
    2riderpridethemovie

    So bad it goes beyond good and back into bad

    Rosie O'Donnell can act. She was great as the wiseacre in A League of Their Own and passable in a similar role in the sequel to Stakeout. Since I'm being generous, her talk show was even entertaining at times, if you go in for that celebrity-fawning type of thing. But this performance is so embarrassingly awful you might question whether she is indeed acting or if she has been struck with what her character suffers from. How else to explain her choices? Mismatched pastel Chuck Taylors with a Tweety Bird T-shirt? A voice somewhere between Pee-wee Herman and Yoda, but without the likability? If Rosie really wanted to do something for the mentally challenged, she would have stuck to executive producing and hired an actual mentally challenged actor. It's not like they could do any worse. From the Forrest Gump pose on a bench on the DVD cover to the Rainmanesque quips, she seems to be changing her characterization every scene. And let's not forget who directed? John Huston's very own daughter. I mean Anjelica Huston must have watched her dad's films. She was practically married to Jack Nicholson so she must have watched his films. Do you not think just a little bit of that talent might have rubbed off on her? This is clearly ego run amok. High-profile celebrities trying "to make a difference" but just demonstrating how woefully out-of-touch they are.
    3IonicBreezeMachine

    A mixture of cloying sentimentality and abrasive obnoxiousness, Riding the Bus with My Sister aspirations are clouded by a misguided badly manufactured take

    Beth Simon (Rosie O'Donnell) is an intellectually disabled woman who doesn't have a job and through government assistance lives on a diet of high sugar high carb foods and spends most of the day riding around on the city bus lines. After Beth's father dies, Beth's estranged sister Rachel (Andie MacDowell) takes a leave of absence from her job as a fashion photographer and stays with Beth for three months to make sure Beth is able to support herself. The two initially have friction regarding Beth's unhealthy life choices and lack of direction, but as Rachel observes Beth's daily routine she learns how integral she is viewed by many of the bus drivers and passengers.

    Riding the Bus with My Sister is a 2005 made-for-TV movie based upon Rachel Simon's 2002 memoir of the same name that chronicled a year of Rachel's life following her mentally challenged sister Beth around in the course of her life a major part of which included riding the buses in their Pennsylvania city home. The options to the story were eventually acquired by Hallmark and CBS where it was released as a TV movie with Rosie O'Donnell staring in and executive producing the project. Upon release the film was a success in the ratings garnering 15 million in total viewership while critical reception tended to pan the film with many lamenting the film's cloying sentimentality and central performance by O'Donnell. However well intentioned Riding the Bus with My Sister might've been, those intentions are lost in the very hackneyed and obnoxious way in which this story is told.

    As the film begins with Beth and Rachel's morning routines cross-cut with each other in the opening credits sequence, there's a clear sense that something has gone horribly wrong in the translation from book to film as Beth condition is presented with a level of over the top whimsy that coupled with O'Donnell's delivery (that many have compared to Pee-Wee Herman including the laugh) feels less like a respectful depiction of someone with a developmental disability and more like a grotesque caricature. While I haven't read the book, I have been made aware of several exaggerations and alterations the producers made such as exaggerating Beth's condition, changing Rachel from a college teacher to a fashion photographer, and killing off Beth and Rachel's father as an inciting incident (with him actually still being alive when the movie aired). With the way the film is made and acted you get the sense the producers homogenized this story to the point all the substance was lost and instead of engaging their audience's minds they simply aim broad shots at the heartstrings using an arsenal of broad archetypes which given it's CBS/Hallmark and it scored 15 million viewers shows you'll never go broke catering to the lowest common denominator.

    Riding the Bus with My Sister might have had some better aspirations at some point, but rather than actually giving us a chance to learn and understand these characters we're instead treated to a depiction of the "Magic Simpleton" trope with dialed up obnoxiousness and sentimentality that aims for heartwarming and instead becomes cloying.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Garth Brooks wrote a song called "Let the Conversation Begin" for the film, but insisted that Chris Gaines be paid separately for recording the song. Hallmark refused, and Studio G backed out.
    • Patzer
      When Beth and Rachel are grocery shopping, there are cans of soda in the shopping cart; in the next scene Rachel loads groceries into her trunk and there are no soda cans in the car and none were put in the trunk before Rachel shut it and got into the car.
    • Zitate

      Beth Simon: Toilet seat assistance in row number one, thank you!

    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Hallmark Hall of Fame (1951)

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 1. Mai 2005 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Hallmark Hall of Fame: Riding the Bus with My Sister (#54.3)
    • Drehorte
      • Hamilton, Ontario, Kanada
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Blue Ridge Motion Pictures
      • Hallmark Hall of Fame Productions
      • Sanitsky Company
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 37 Min.(97 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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