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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Charmed, I'm sure, October 29, 2003
I stumbled across this film on a Saturday while surfing our movie channels. I was immediately interested when I saw that it was a period piece and that Gena Rowlands was in it. She has done a lot of movies lately where she is a great mom or grandmother (Hope Floats, Something to Talk About, etc.). The movie is set in the south in the early 1940's. Its a story about three strong women - Charlie Kate Birch (Rowlands), her daughter Sophia (Mimi Rogers) and her granddaughter Margaret (Susan May Pratt) and their experiences in their small town. Charlie Kate is a healer/midwife/herbalist. She is extremely independent, and a staunch feminist. She is not afraid to stand up for what is right in her opinion, which can cause problems in town from time to time, and embarrass her daughter, who is much more conservative. Charlie Kate spends most of her time helping people in the community, and her granddaughter is eager to immitate and learn from her. While she is out helping her grandmother, Margaret is asked to help wounded soldiers read and write letters. As a result of this experience she meets a young man and falls in love. I found Charlie Kate and Margaret to be the most relatable and interesting people in the film. Sophia seems to be desperate for a relationship, and petulant and demanding when it doesnt go the way she wants. But in Mimi Rogers defense, I get the impression that this is how the character is (obviously I havent read the book). Gene Rowlands does not disappoint in this film. I had never seen Susan May Pratt in a film before, but I enjoyed her performance immensely. Her smile lights up the screen, and the natural curiosity of her character is infectious. Overall I thought this film was beautiful and enjoyable.
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