Pay It Forward (2000)

Rated: ![]()
Edition Details:
Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Dolby
Commentary by director Mimi Leder
Behind-the-scenes documentary
Cast/ filmmaker career highlights
Widescreen anamorphic format
Editorial
Reviews
Pay It Forward is a multi-level marketing scheme
of the heart. Beginning as a seventh-grade class assignment to put into action
an idea that could change the world, young Trevor McKinney (Haley Joel Osment)
comes up with a plan to do good deeds for three people who then by way of
payment each must do good turns for three other people. These nine people also
must pay it forward and so on, ad infinitum. If successful, the resulting
network of do-gooders ought to comprise the entire world. Trevor's attempts to
get the ball rolling include befriending a junkie (James Caviezel) and trying
to set up his recovering-alcoholic mother (Helen Hunt) with his burn-victim
teacher (Kevin Spacey), who posed the assignment.
While this could have turned into
unmitigated schmaltz, the acting elevates this film to mitigated schmaltz. By
turns powerful and measured, the performances of Spacey, Hunt, and Osment can't
make up for the many missteps in a screenplay that sanitizes the look of the
lower-middle class and expects us to believe that homeless alcoholics and
junkies speak in the elevated manner of grad students. (Can that really be
Angie Dickinson as Hunt's dispossessed mother? Yes, it is!) The germ of the
story is a good one, though, and one may wonder how it would have been handled
by the likes of Frank Capra, who could balance sentiment with humor. But
clearly Capra would never have let the ending of his version to take the
nosedive into clich้ and pathos that director Mimi Leder has allowed in this
film. More than a few viewers will also recognize that Leder has blatantly
borrowed her final image from Field of Dreams, where its intended effect
was more keenly and honestly felt. --Jim Gay --