Sharing the Secret
- Película de TV
- 2000
- 1h 30min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.3/10
1.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA teenage girl who feels she must always seem happy for her parents and friends secretly binges and purges.A teenage girl who feels she must always seem happy for her parents and friends secretly binges and purges.A teenage girl who feels she must always seem happy for her parents and friends secretly binges and purges.
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado en total
Julius Charles Ritter
- Edward
- (as Julius Ritter)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
If you havn't seen this movie I highly recommend you do.It's an excellent true story.I love Alison Lohman she is so talented side note: I also loved her in 7th heaven.The whole story line is amazing and the way they chose there characters waz awesome. The acting in this film is
very awesome.
very awesome.
This film rubbed me in some uncomfortable ways but opened my eyes. It truly does portray the realness of an eating disorder.
The main character does a wonderful job acting her part. A great movie to show young teenagers in high school too.
Just a very sad concept.
The main character does a wonderful job acting her part. A great movie to show young teenagers in high school too.
Just a very sad concept.
This was surprisingly intelligent for a TV movie, and quite true to my own experience of bulimia. It was actually well-researched, and I can only assume it was written by someone who's gone through a similar experience, because it had all the little details. The characters were quite well-drawn, and the performances by Mare Winningham and Alison Lohman were great. I think what I like most was that they made them specific and smart, and there was no dumbing down of the reasons for Beth's bulimia (it wasn't some "diet gone out of control, caused by the pressures placed on girls by the media, pressures we're not actually going to address..."). Her mother wasn't completely clueless - too often on television they'll take an issue that EVERYONE has some awareness of and try to tell us that their protagonists are the last remaining people on earth who don't ("Diabetes? What's that? Oh, my world is all askew, doctor, please explain it all to me as if I'm a small child", etc). It was brilliant that her mother was a psychologist and even she didn't see the signs. And the scenes where Beth was throwing up weren't OVERLY melodramatic and sensationalist, and concentrated more on bulimics' need for secrecy, and their out-of-controlness. The scene where Beth tells her mother she's bulimic would've made me cry if there hadn't been other people in the room.
Okay, so I liked those bits. What didn't work for me so well was the ending, which headed back to the TV movie territory we know and don't particularly love, but I guess they had to wrap it up. "You, too, can cure your child's eating disorder, if you have lots and lots of money and live in America..."
And can I just say again that I really like Mare Winningham. She's great.
Okay, so I liked those bits. What didn't work for me so well was the ending, which headed back to the TV movie territory we know and don't particularly love, but I guess they had to wrap it up. "You, too, can cure your child's eating disorder, if you have lots and lots of money and live in America..."
And can I just say again that I really like Mare Winningham. She's great.
This movie was a great educational piece for eating disorders. The acting was very good and the storyline flowed well. Mare Winningham and Alison Lohman deliver superb performances. The casting overall was well done.
The only thing I saw that is a criticism is Beth's therapist having with her mother and discussing Beth's case! HIPPA violation glalore. Plus patient confidentiality issues.
In the end this movie was well done and a good piece for teenagers or anyone with an eating disorder. I miss the kind of quality this movie exudes, they just do not make them like this anymore, much enjoyed this film.
The only thing I saw that is a criticism is Beth's therapist having with her mother and discussing Beth's case! HIPPA violation glalore. Plus patient confidentiality issues.
In the end this movie was well done and a good piece for teenagers or anyone with an eating disorder. I miss the kind of quality this movie exudes, they just do not make them like this anymore, much enjoyed this film.
This is the only movie I've ever seen that actually represents the feelings wrapped up in an eating disorder. That scene when she tells her mom, oh my god, that was pretty much me. Actually, the whole movie is pretty much my story. So the character 'Beth' is absolutely amazing, I think, in a painful way of course. Brilliantly acted, too. The only thing that really bothers me, is how it ends with her fake smile again, and her thoughts that life can only be superficial... It kills me. Plus, that anorexic therapist, who is obviously still so insecure and only thinking about doing and saying the right thing... Awful. And her mom, who apparently just wants her daughter to be well, since whenever she's angry, her mom turns her the cold shoulder, and Beth comes crawling back, of course. It's so painful to watch, I would much rather have seen her mom just being confronted and Beth being taken care of and made stronger and comforted to realize that the world can actually be really hopeful, and joyful, and great. Hmm, bit of a psychobabble, but obviously this movie means a lot to me.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaAshlynn Rose's debut.
- Bandas sonorasOnly Human
Written and Performed by Diana Lorden
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Sharing the Secret (2000) officially released in Canada in English?
Responda