Most Helpful Customer Reviews
27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Eric Lloyd Gives a Performance That Will Win Your Heart!, December 6, 2001
Scott Bradfield's novel of the same name receives a senstive and winning screen adaptation. Although this movie did not get much attention when it first appeared, you will greatly enjoy seeing it on DVD. The DVD transfer is first-rate. Eric Lloyd is the one to watch here! --Sensitive Stephen, Host of BoysOnYourScreen.net A plot summary: Ten year old Phillip Davis has spent half his life joyously living on the California highways with his carefree and highly seductive mother. Every night is a road, every man is a map, and no love is stronger than the love Phillip feels for his mom. Mom is light and Mom is motion. So when Mom decides to settle down and lead an average life with an average American man, Phillip sees himself as her savior, and his mission is to liberate Mom. At first, he appears to succeed, but an unexpected event sidetracks his plans: Phillip's powerful father re-enters his life and he wants his family back. Oedipus was lucky - he was ignorant of his crime. But Phillip is all too aware of his situation and he knows exactly what he must do to regain a life in motion. Phillip's obsessive love for his mother is intense and perhaps perverse but it is also as innocent and psychologically familiar as Humbert Humbert's hopeless love for Lolita. Ultimately, Phillip learns that Mom is a world all her own and there are some places we must all go alone.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Alcoholic floozie on her own raises murderous brat--, June 4, 2005
So what's new?
I'm reminded of a friend's description of an article he had read: zoologists observed a herd of elephants whose alpha male had died. The young male elephants failed to mature properly, becoming wantonly destructive, and the adult females could not control them. Only when a new alpha male joined the herd was order restored.
If this glitteringly surreal but naturalistic and nihilistic film shows any truth, it is that humans are no different in this respect. It seems an unlikely moral to come from a reputedly feminist director, but there we are.
10-year-old Phillip appears to be a sympathetic character at first: very intelligent, thoughtful, adventurous, devoted to his mother, making the best of a bad situation. But gradually he is revealed to be totally self-centered and amoral, with an oversized Oedipus complex, a morbid imagination, a keen nose for the worst of company, and of course no manners at all. Some would say he needs a shrink. It is more obvious that he needs a dad, although anyone stepping into that role does so in peril of his life, as Pedro discovers.
The last scenes are represented as an affluent but utterly sterile existence: mother and son sun themselves on air mattresses in rich husband/dad's backyward swimming pool, conversing as they slowly drift apart in the water. But at least everyone's still alive.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
disgusting, August 17, 2003
By A Customer
I originally bought this movie to see Eric Lloyd, it turned out to be a complete bomb. There is no plot, it is incredibly weird, lacking any sense of anything. All that happens is him and his mom go from town to town stealing what they can from unsuspecting strangers to survive. It will leave you thinking "what was that" and have you looking for some normality for an hour or two later. There is nothing to grasp. If you were thinking about buying it to see Eric, it's not worth it, go see him in something else worth the time.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
|