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The Lost Child [VHS] by Karen Arthur
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Product detailsActor: Cristine Rose, Dinah Manoff, Irene Bedard, Jamey Sheridan, Mercedes Ruehl Director: Karen Arthur Cinematographer: Tom Neuwirth Producer: Brent Shields Producer: Richard Welsh Producer: Robert Bennett Steinhauer Writer: Claire Safran Writer: Sally Robinson Writer: Yvette Melanson Edition: VHS Tape Format: Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC Running Time: 94 minutes Release Date: 2002-05-21 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Publisher: Hallmark Studio: Hallmark
VHS Movie Reviews of The Lost Child [VHS]Movie Review: COMING HOME Summary: 3 Stars
Adopted by a middle aged Jewish couple and doted on by her mother young Rebecca Hoffman leads a conventional life. Then her mother dies and her father remarries. In his new marriage there is no room for Rebecca. She is one to be tolerated. She no longer has a home. Years later Rebecca searches for her birth parents and comes to the realization that she is not white nor Jewish. Rebecca is Navajo. Lost Child is a film based on the the autobiography, Looking For Lost Bird, by Yvette Melanson. In this picture we see the life of a child stolen from her birth parents and made to assume a new identity. Her adoptive father's reluctance to have her, her feeling of isolation and her quest to find her identity is both moving and tragic as we see a young woman so far from her home. Mercedes Ruehl plays a sensitive and savy Rebecca who tries so hard to be accepted by her adoptive father. Her discovery of her Navajo roots gives her comfort and a sense of completion. Yet, she too and her family undergo some heartaches and challenges as she returns home. This movie shows the hope of a mother seeking a reunion of her children. We witness the reintergration of a woman back to her heritage. We also see the ugly side of cultural prejudice as her daughters attempt to fit in with their new family and culture. This is an enjoyable film that is a sanitized version of the book. Everyone in the picture is so good, so noble to the point of being unbelievable. Of course everything works itself out and the family lives happily ever after. If only life could be that simple. Inspite of that Lost Child is well worth your seeing as you get a glimpse into another culture.
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