Jack and the Beanstalk: The Real Story
- TV Mini Series
- 2001
- 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
4.3K
YOUR RATING
The bones of a giant are discovered. This turns Jack Robinson's life upside down as he learns the truth behind the fairy tale and how he can fix his greedy ancestor's mistakes.The bones of a giant are discovered. This turns Jack Robinson's life upside down as he learns the truth behind the fairy tale and how he can fix his greedy ancestor's mistakes.The bones of a giant are discovered. This turns Jack Robinson's life upside down as he learns the truth behind the fairy tale and how he can fix his greedy ancestor's mistakes.
- Won 1 Primetime Emmy
- 3 wins & 4 nominations total
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Featured reviews
Magical and Entertaining
I watched this movie all in one go and I must say I didn't move from my chair. Modine and Mia Sara's performances are excellent as are the rest. Sara plays the girl from another world who comes to Modine to help him find the truth and help her bring welfare back to her people. Modine slowly will discover where the riches of his ancestors came from. Then he will try to right the wrongs and end the curse to his family. The family moves between two worlds. Our world and a fantastic one. The scenery and the landscapes are wonderful and there is also some mistery and twists till the end. The movie addresses the greed of people and how they would go all the way just to satisfy themselves ignoring the needs of others. I highly recommend it.
another winner from the Henson studio
this mini series was a complete winner from start to finish! a wonderful, imaginative retelling of the old fairy tale, that does a great job of imagining an alternate beginning and then adding a great storyline to help finish it out. the special effects were wonderful, including the creatures from the henson studio workroom. an excellent visualization of the world atop the beanstalk, and the rulers of their world. it was tied in very well with the modern world, and Matthew Modine made for a very likable Jack, who tries to make things right again. Mia Sara as Ondine once again shows that she is best used in a longer premise where she has room to flesh out her character. her acting has definitely improved since Timecop, and she is as beautiful as ever, if not more so!
Very entertaining
I saw Jack and the Beanstalk:The Real Story on the SyFy Channel, and I wasn't expecting much. But it was actually very entertaining, while a tad too long and Jon Voight did have an accent and mannerisms that did fall flat sometimes, it did have a lot of good points. The characters are engaging, with only Siggy being written clumsily more in how he was developed rather than the lines. The production values are colourful and enchanting in their look, there is some quirky writing and the story is as magical as can be. The pace is very brisk mostly with only the last thirty minutes or so feeling as though it was meandering, and the acting is mostly above decent with Jack being a likable hero and Vanessa Redgrave coming off best. Overall, fun and entertaining. 8/10 Bethany Cox
Modern Classic
When I saw the listing for this film I imagined that it would be another network fantasy movie crap fest. The casting of Sara and Modine caused me to tape it and give it a look. As expected the fantasy land odd folk are bland, rather it is the "real world" segments that are magical (and literate). Sara (as fantasy land emissary) and Modine are perfect together.
Slow but interesting retelling of a classic Fairytale
I liked this quite a bit, despite a bit of a slow pace and general lack of umpth in the direction and editing. The cast are mostly good, the characters are all given time to get involved in the mystery and their actions and choices drive the story along. Some of the sets look pretty good, not all of them but it mostly works. The story unfolds slowly and I do mean slowly giving you limited information so that the story only unfolds gradually. I think I did prefer the first half the best. A few little elements bothered me like a character in the 1600s shows up with obviously modern glasses but nobody thinks it odd, hes also strong enough to overpower a man much bigger and younger than him. The overall tone I found slightly downbeat though Jon Voight is in full comic panto mode which is such a weird contrast. Its in the second half the problems begin a bit the strange world above inhabitants with magic creatures but also geese and horses, where do the people get their clothing and weapons from? How do they know about Christmas pudding? Why are there all these random deities as giants. Why are the giants randomly so trusting and helpless? How would they survive like that? Several performances just aren't good either I'm afraid. It's does have a very well done 3 act structure though with a solid climax and a love story that's not too badly done.
Overall I didn't care all too much though about the characters which isn't great when its 3 hours long.
Overall I didn't care all too much though about the characters which isn't great when its 3 hours long.
Did you know
- TriviaThis was Richard Attenborough's final television acting role before his death on August 24, 2014 at the age of 90.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Troldspejlet: Episode #27.7 (2002)
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- Jack y la habichuela gigante: La verdadera historia
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