Disney's The Kid Review


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Disney's The Kid Feature
- Russ Doritz (Bruce Willis) is a successful, but unhappy image consultant who magically meets himself as an eight-year-old boy who doesn t like what he sees. With the help of the boy, Russ gets in touch with his childhood dreams. System Requirements: Starring: Bruce Willis, Lily Tomlin, and Emily Mortimor. Directed By: Jon Turteltaub. Running Time: 101 Min., Color. This film is presented
Russ Duritz (Bruce Willis) is an ultracynical, 40-year-old L.A. image consultant who fashions bogus façades for scumbag clients. Oblivious to his own need for a makeover, he's a tyrant in the office (to the chagrin of his sarcastic assistant, played to perfection by Lily Tomlin), and he's emotionally unavailable to the morally centered woman (Emily Mortimer) who senses goodness beneath Russ's hardened veneer. Not a moment too soon, a pudgy kid (Spencer Breslin) mysteriously appears in Russ's life, revealing himself to be Rusty Duritz--that is, Russ's 8-year-old self, arriving by some magic to put the adult Russ's life into beneficial perspective. This variation on
A Christmas Carol has Rusty guiding Russ on a tour of his past to reveal how he became a loveless, hard-shelled loser. It takes a bit of smarmy chicken-soup psychology to explain it all, but
The Kid is an otherwise charming and involving fantasy, suggesting that perhaps we'd all benefit from a bit of counseling by our younger selves. Written with admirable restraint by Audrey Wells (who brought a similar appeal to
The Truth About Cats and Dogs) and directed by Jon Turteltaub (
Cool Runnings), the movie doesn't force its supernatural elements or attempt to explain Rusty's existence. It's just a fable for our modern age and a reminder to embrace the better angels of our nature. Delivered with an easy blend of humor and sentiment, that message makes
The Kid an unexpected pleasure. (Look closely for Matthew Perry as Willis's shaggy-haired client.)
--Jeff Shannon
Screenwriter Audrey Wells says she knew immediately when she saw Spencer Breslin that he was the perfect kid. "The kid spoke five words, and they weren't even words in the script, he just walked on stage and said 'hello' and I knew he was the one," says Wells.

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