The Kid | |
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Directed by | Jon Turteltaub |
Written by | Audrey Wells |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Peter Menzies Jr. |
Edited by | |
Music by |
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Production companies | |
Distributed by | Buena Vista Pictures Distribution |
Release date |
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Running time | 104 minutes [2] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $65 million [3] |
Box office | $110.3 million [3] |
The Kid (also known as Disney'sThe Kid) [4] [5] is a 2000 American fantasy comedy-drama film, directed by Jon Turteltaub and written by Audrey Wells. The film follows a 40-year-old image consultant (Bruce Willis) who is mysteriously confronted by an eight-year-old version of himself (Spencer Breslin); Emily Mortimer, Lily Tomlin, Chi McBride, and Jean Smart also star.
The film was released in the United States by Walt Disney Pictures on July 7, 2000. It received mixed reviews from critics and grossed $110 million against its $65 million budget.
Days from turning 40, Russ Duritz is a successful but abrasive image consultant in Los Angeles and has a strained relationship with his father. Returning home one day he finds a toy plane on his porch and a strange boy indoors, whom he chases through the streets.
After seeing the boy enter a diner, Russ finds no sign of him inside. Thinking he is hallucinating, he visits a psychiatrist, but finds the same boy on his couch eating popcorn and watching cartoons when he returns home. The boy says his name is Rusty and that he was just searching for his toy plane.
Seeing a resemblance, Russ compares memories and birthmarks and realizes Rusty is actually himself as a kid. After questioning Russ, Rusty tells him, "I grow up to be a loser." Rusty dreams of owning a dog named Chester and flying planes, but Russ gave up on those dreams.
Russ's co-worker Amy thinks that Russ and Rusty are father and son and accuses him of being a dead-beat dad. Rusty assures her he is not his son and implores Russ to tell her the truth, but he thinks she'd never believe them. Amy realizes the truth while watching the two argue, as they are nearly identical.
In response to Rusty's questions about how he became Russ, he tells him about his scholarship to UCLA and working for six years to get a master's degree and change himself to who he is. Rusty understands Russ's job as an image consultant to be training people to pretend to be somebody else.
Russ cancels his appointments and spends the day with Rusty, trying to figure out what from the past needs to be fixed to get him back home. Driving through a tunnel, Russ recalls a fight he lost with some bullies who were abusing a three-legged dog. They emerge from the tunnel into Rusty's eighth birthday in 1968.
Russ helps Rusty win the fight and save the dog, but realizes that was only the first half of the ordeal. Rusty's terminally ill mother is called to take him home, where his father angrily berates him for getting into trouble and causing his mother further stress. Rusty breaks down and his father harshly tells him to grow up, making Russ realize why he is the way he is today.
Tearfully, Russ assures Rusty that he was not responsible for his mother's death, and that his father's outburst was not because he truly believed Rusty was responsible, but simply because he was scared about the prospect of raising his children alone.
They celebrate their birthday, but realize their efforts to change the outcome of the day have failed, as their father's outburst left Rusty emotionally scarred in both cases. When a dog named Chester greets Rusty, they find that his owner is an older version of them who owns planes and has a family with Amy.
Realizing that Rusty's appearance was meant to change his own ways rather than Rusty's, Russ arranges to see his father and, with a puppy, visits Amy, who invites him into her home.
The screenplay for The Kid was written by Audrey Wells, who originally had plans to direct with Jon Turteltaub as a producer. [5] However, Turteltaub fell in love with the story and decided to direct. He had Bruce Willis in mind to play Russ, saying "Bruce is perfect for the part because he has this movie star thing of being incredibly likable on screen, which really works well when you have a guy who's playing a jerk." [5]
The Kid was part of a three-picture deal that Willis cut with Disney to compensate them for the dissolution of 1997's Broadway Brawler . [6]
Disney's The Kid opened at #4 at the North American box office, making $12,687,726 USD in its opening weekend, behind The Patriot , The Perfect Storm , and Scary Movie . The film eventually ended its run by grossing $69,691,949 in North America and $40,625,631 elsewhere, thus bringing its worldwide total to $110,317,580, against a $65 million budget. [3]
Upon its release, the film received mixed reviews from critics. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , 49% of 99 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.3/10.The website's consensus reads: "Critics find The Kid to be too sweet and the movie's message to be annoyingly simplistic." [7] Metacritic , which uses a weighted average , assigned the film a score of 45 out of 100, based on 32 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. [8] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale. [9]
Film critic Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the movie 3 stars out of 4, observing that "Disney's The Kid is warm-hearted and effective, a sweet little parable that involves a man and a boy who help each other become a better boy, and a better man. It's a sweet film, unexpectedly involving, and shows again that Willis, so easily identified with action movies, is gifted in the areas of comedy and pathos: This is a cornball plot, and he lends it credibility just by being in it." [10] Film critic A. O. Scott, writing for The New York Times, observed: "Mr. Willis stands by while a child swipes a movie out of his open palm...Spencer Breslin, Russ is tubby, cute-but-annoying almost-8-year-old self." [11]
More critical reviews cited the film's approach, which they described as too sentimental in tone. The San Francisco Examiner 's Welsey Morris called the film a "dishonest baby boomer melodrama of inner-selfness and increased sensitivity for yuppie dads", noting that its "wields its Middle America values and moralistic flogging of idiosyncratic lifestyle choices like a flipped bird", though he commented Breslin is "more charming than the film deserves". [12] Todd McCarthy of Variety wrote "director Jon Turteltaub's insistence upon hammering every point home with giant closeups and relentless musical underlining makes this insufferably cloying and sickly sweet for anyone with the least intolerance to 'find the inner child' saccharinity". [13]
Association | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref. |
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Saturn Awards | Best Performance by a Younger Actor | Spencer Breslin | Nominated | [14] |
Young Artist Awards | Best Performance in a Feature Film – Young Actor Age Ten or Under | Won | [15] | |
Best Family Feature Film – Comedy | Nominated | |||
YoungStar Awards | Best Young Actor in a Comedy Film | Nominated | [16] |
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title "designed to avoid confusion with Chaplin's 1921 classic"