Too many fans seem to be blown away
n my opinion it was a great movie with some interesting elements, even though having some plot holes and the ending probably was just too messy and crammed together, but still fun to watch and not your casual movie that is similar to all other ones.
View MoreWhile it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.
View MoreWorth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.
Town where no one ages, folks are kept forever young by drinking water from a magic spring. Along comes Kyle MacLachan and his Son, Joseph Cross. Enamored with the strange behaving residents, they are gradually enlightened to the price one pays for brief immortality. This bland TV movie really goes nowhere beyond the initial idea, and gradually peters out. The town's bizarre method of controlling overpopulation of the potential immortals is beaten to death with several 100th birthday rituals. There isn't enough material here to maintain interest for 93 minutes. As a "Twilight Zone" episode, "The Spring" would have been totally acceptable, but the reality is, as a full length film it is simply too long. - MERK
View More(Some Spoilers) Driving through the hills and valleys of middle America both Dennis Conway, Kayle Maclachlan, and his son Nick, Joseph Cross, come across his couple stranded when their car went off the road. As things turn out the couple Robert & Molly Lovell, Zachary Ansley & Demi Delory, seem scared of something and despite Dennis and Nick helping them out of the ditch their in they both are more interested in checking out of the area then thanking them. In the Lovell's heist they leave a duffel bag at the accident site that Dennis decides to return to them in a place, from checking out the tag on it, called Springville.It's in Springville where life springs eternal for the people living there and it's not long after their arrival that both Dennis & Nick come to realize that very amazing fact of life. The first thing that Dennis notices at Springville is that nobody seem to have aged beyond their 35th birthday! And even more surprising is that at the Springville Cemetery the gravestones have no day of birth or death dates on them!It's only after when the town doctor Sophie Weston, Alison Eastwood, got to treat little Nick who was almost crushed to death by a lumber avalanche, from off a truck, that the truth comes out about what exactly Springville is really all about! It's a town that's closed to any new home buyers which has this really groovy spring on its property. A spring, that Springville was named after, that's the fabled "Fountain of Youth" that latter day Spanish explorers lost their lives looking for. A "Fountain of Youth" located not in Florida where it was suspected to be but in the very heart of small town middle America itself!***SPOILERS*** With all the good news about Spingville there's one very bad thing about it and the people that reside there. After they reach their 100th birthday their given a grand send-off by being drowned in the very spring water that got them to get that far in life. With Dennis falling in love with Sophie and wanting to marry her he soon finds out that not only was or is, were quite not sure, she married to Gus, George Eads, the local car mechanic and gas pump jockey for some 82 years but is, like Gus, about to be put under the waves and drowned on her 100th birthday!Interesting made for TV movie about eternal life and the drawbacks that come along with it. The wise people of Springville had long ago found out that life isn't worth living when there's no end to it. This creates many problems like population explosions and the using up of the world's natural resources. This in fact can lead to far worse things then death itself which is the normal way of nature keeping checks and balances on the environment and world populations.It takes a while for Dennis and Kyle to realize what they got, by trying to become Springville residents, themselves into. The two later decide to take their chances on the outside world and face whatever it, in illnesses and accidents, has to offer them then be part of a society that's forced to murder their own, when they reach 100, in order for them to survive!
View MoreThis made for TV movie is about a father and son, who pass unintentionally by a small town. The story begins with the two coming to the aid of an anxious couple who have crashed their car into a ditch, on a quiet stretch of road. They leave a bag behind, so the father and son attempt to return the bag to the couple, as it has an address on it. After successfully locating the address, they become stranded in the town and are forced to stay. On the morning after, the son gets hurt and is forced to spend some time in the local hospital. Forced to prolong their stay, they begin to mix with the locals. Initially unknown to the father and son, everyone in the town does not age physically. This mystery slowly unravels to them as well as the secret to their eternal youth, and what happens when it is time for one to 'continue the journey'.
View MoreThis is the typical "small town with something to hide" story. In this case, the "something" is a spring that keeps the inhabitants perpetually young -- until they reach their centennial. When a townie reaches the age of 100, the community throws a lavish birthday party, the climax of which is the murder of the guest of honor. One way to control the population, I guess.Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" is a much better example of the genre.The most notable thing about this movie is that the author of the book upon which the movie is based, Clifford Irving, did 14 months in jail for defrauding his publisher with a phony "authorized" biography of Howard Hughes.There's nothing great or really memorable about this movie, but it's a pleasant enough way to kill a couple of hours.
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