IMDb RATING
7.4/10
5.1K
YOUR RATING
A journalist finds himself questioning his own life when his best friend, a dying man, offers him some very powerful wisdom and advice for coping in relationships, careers and society.A journalist finds himself questioning his own life when his best friend, a dying man, offers him some very powerful wisdom and advice for coping in relationships, careers and society.A journalist finds himself questioning his own life when his best friend, a dying man, offers him some very powerful wisdom and advice for coping in relationships, careers and society.
- Won 4 Primetime Emmys
- 12 wins & 12 nominations total
Mark Eric Charbonneau
- Jon
- (as Mark Helm)
Carlton Wilborn
- Eddie
- (as Carlton Wilton)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
His performance. His admirable performance . And the balance with beautiful work of Hank Azaria. This is the "seed" for a loving adaptation of Mitch Albom novel. Sure, it is not the book. But it is the great kick for each viewer to read it. Off course, it could be better. But not only the noble message is the axis in this case . The heart of movie is one of the last gifts from extraordinary, magnificent Jack Lemmon. Who offers more than a character but, for me, in few scenes, he offers himself. Traits of life and careeer, having the art and courage to propose new nuances to the story of Morrie Schwartz. The result - a film who must see.
Tuesdays With Morrie aired on Tv3 last night here in New Zealand.
This film was truly worth the Emmy awards it received. Hank Azaria was excellent but Jack Lemmon was amazing, making his character believable and interesting.
A great film. ***1/2 out of ****
This film was truly worth the Emmy awards it received. Hank Azaria was excellent but Jack Lemmon was amazing, making his character believable and interesting.
A great film. ***1/2 out of ****
This is a great TV movie about a retired teacher named Morrie Schwartz who is slowly dying of Lou Gherig's disease. Instead of being miserable about his inevitable death, Morrie has accepted it. An old pupil of his, Mitch Albom, has come to visit Morrie after hearing of his sickness on the news. Morrie starts to teach Mitch about his ideas on the meaning of life. He says "When we learn to die, we learn to live." When you can accept that you will die someday, you live life differently. He also says to always forgive everyone before it's too late and to love everyone. "We must love one another, or die."
It is made very clear from the very beginning of this movie that Morrie is going to die. Knowing this makes you dread the ending of this movie, but not as much as watching Morrie in such pain, especially at night. There were great acting jobs by everyone in this movie, including Wendy Moniz and Hank Azaria. But Jack Lemmon steals the show.
This movie reminded me a lot of "I'm Not Rappaport," starring Jack Lemmon's partner Walter Matthau. It's an excellent and beautiful movie that will really make you look at life differently, which is what Morrie would have liked.
It is made very clear from the very beginning of this movie that Morrie is going to die. Knowing this makes you dread the ending of this movie, but not as much as watching Morrie in such pain, especially at night. There were great acting jobs by everyone in this movie, including Wendy Moniz and Hank Azaria. But Jack Lemmon steals the show.
This movie reminded me a lot of "I'm Not Rappaport," starring Jack Lemmon's partner Walter Matthau. It's an excellent and beautiful movie that will really make you look at life differently, which is what Morrie would have liked.
Even though Oprah funded / supported this film with the change she had in her left pocket, her involvement in making this film possible was worthy. Jack Lemmon gives another brilliant / unrecognized performance as Morrie, the old friend and teacher who is preparing himself to die. Hank Azaria is surprisingly good as well. For a change, Azaria moves away from his work in comedy and many of his character driven roles to play a heart-filled character. By the second half of the movie, you forget that he is the voice of many Simpson characters. The ending of this movie is worth watching this movie again and again and again. If you have ever had to say goodbye to a loved one, you will understand and be a fan of Tuesdays with Morrie.
Although this movie was a made for TV movie and the fade outs left me feeling like I was about to see a commercial, this movie is great.
This movie deals with aspects of life that people don't like to talk about openly when in reality they are all just part of life: love, friendship, who you are, elderly, and most of all death. This movie addresses death unlike I have seen other movies do. It confronts death straight on and gives you a different view on it all.
Many times during this movie I was left feeling more open minded about things, and this movie also had a wealth of quotes one could live by.
The acting in the movie was good, the messages conveyed are heavy messages that you have to really think about.
The direction, lighting, and cinematography were all fairly good.
I recommend this movie if you want to learn more about yourself and your future.
This movie deals with aspects of life that people don't like to talk about openly when in reality they are all just part of life: love, friendship, who you are, elderly, and most of all death. This movie addresses death unlike I have seen other movies do. It confronts death straight on and gives you a different view on it all.
Many times during this movie I was left feeling more open minded about things, and this movie also had a wealth of quotes one could live by.
The acting in the movie was good, the messages conveyed are heavy messages that you have to really think about.
The direction, lighting, and cinematography were all fairly good.
I recommend this movie if you want to learn more about yourself and your future.
Did you know
- TriviaLast credited film role of Jack Lemmon.
- GoofsPreviously identified goof states that young Morrie translates the telegram from the hospital into German, and that this is incorrect since the father is Russian. However, young Morrie is translating into Yiddish, not German, which would have been the language used by Russian Jewish immigrants.
- Quotes
Morrie Schwartz: When you learn how to die, you learn how to live.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 52nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (2000)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Oprah Winfrey Presents: Tuesdays with Morrie
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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