Sister Cities (TV Movie 2016) Poster

(2016 TV Movie)

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8/10
Packs some powerful emotional punches - a must see....
wildsparrow1618 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Despite it's silly title, this is a powerful movie full of raw, intense characters. This is an emotional story of four estranged sisters coming together after their mother's death. These woman are incredibly different from each other, making them very memorable. Austin, the one who lived with her mother and was her caretaker when she got sick, Carolina, a hard-edged attorney, Dallas, a tightly-wound woman reeling from the effects of her upcoming divorce, and Baltimore, a young, free- spirited bohemian type. The sisters are absent for most of their mother's adult life, with the exception of Austin, yet feel compelled to judge and place blame as if they had been there all along. However, these siblings do love each other, and must try to overcome their obstacles while uncovering the mystery that shrouds their mother's death. I was not expecting much from this movie, given it's rather vanilla title - I was wrong.
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7/10
***
edwagreen24 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Fine acting but of course a very morbid, depressing film where the writer-daughter more than assists in her mother's suicide, the latter a victim suffering from ALS.

While the topic of being allowed to end it when you're terminally ill has become quite controversial today.

Each one of the daughters is a unique group of individuals with varying lives and the one who is an attorney vying for a judgeship is all too ready to condemn what her sister has done.

Alfred Molina briefly appears as the father of Austin, the daughter who complied with the wishes of the mother. Jackie Weaver, as the dying mother, is excellent as the woman trapped in a body that is rapidly failing.
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7/10
Excellent But Medically Inaccurate
rcarlberg2 January 2017
This movie affected me very deeply because I was the primary caretaker for my own mother, who died in 2011 of a form of ALS. The issues involved were very close to the surface for me (still) and I reacted very emotionally to this beautifully crafted story.

Unfortunately the timeline in the movie was grossly inaccurate. It took my mother eight agonizing years to lose the use of her body, bit-by-bit, and by the end she could neither talk nor communicate. She slowly lost the use of her legs about 4 years after her first stumbling signs of trouble, and lost the ability to write about 6 years in. She was bedridden for the last three years of her life, 100% mentally normal but slowly becoming encased in a body that would no longer respond to her.

She refused a feeding tube when swallowing became a problem, and eventually had to die, three weeks later, from slow starvation. It was horrible. She BEGGED (when she still could) to be hastened toward death but by then there was nothing we could do. Washington's "Death With Dignity" law did not apply to her situation.

So while the story here treated similar circumstances with compassion, there was an unrealistic portrayal of the true horrors of ALS.
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7/10
Somewhat disappointing after reading the play
cjohmann18 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
First, let me say that I watched Sister Cities twice, once with commercials, once without. Far, far better without. This film should be seen only that way.

Second, the adaptation from stage play to screen script was disappointing to me. I had some concerns early on when I heard about the expanded cast, but I figured since the playwright Colette Freedman was doing the adaptation, she'd only open the play visually and with a few flashbacks for fill-in background. Unfortunately, the premise and the focus of the film is changed from the play and it's that change that bothered me. What had been a play about four sisters who had drifted apart over recent years only to be reunited over the mystery of their mother's death became a movie about the mother, her illness, and the daughter who took care of her.

The play is about the sisters. There is only one scene, albeit significant, between the mother and Austin in flashback about mid-way through. That's sufficient to let the audience in on the mother's suffering, Austin's care-giving, and the mother's death. The dialogue is fast-paced, witty, sarcastic, humorous, biting, mixed with pathos, sympathy, love especially in the first half. Through this dialogue you learn each of the sisters' background, place in the family, and what their lives are today. You also find out the mother was absent, at least emotionally, much of the time as well as the fact that the sisters are actually half-sisters. Carolina takes the lead, which is all the reader or viewer needs in order to understand her role in the family. It is why her decision to report Austin is accepted by the two youngest and why she has to be the one drugged by Austin.

The movie loses much of the humor in the dialogue, drags through too many outside scenes and characters, and even got the crucial drugging scene wrong. In the play, Carolina is fully conscious the entire time. She can see and hear everything going on, including the conversation that this is exactly what ALS had done to their mother. She cannot feel, she cannot move, but she's there the entire time and expresses her horrified reactions through her eyes. This effect is negated in the movie by having Carolina rendered unconscious by the drug, which made no sense.

By changing the focus, the film became a disease-of-the-week type of TV movie creating a much larger role for the mother, at two ages no less, and greatly expanding Austin's role. In turn, that necessarily weakened the other sisters' roles, both in depth and screen time. It all leaves me wondering what was left on the editing room floor.

For me the flashbacks were overdone. Some with (old) Mary and Austin repeated the same info and several served no purpose at all. This was true of the new characters and expanded scenes: the book signing and meeting Austin's girlfriend, Austin's meeting with her publisher, and Austin's interaction with her father. The Thanksgiving dinner scene showed the beginning of Mary's ALS, her secrecy from all but Austin, and the fact that at one time this family was capable of a happy time together. The worse for me was the lengths the film took to commit the assisted suicide. It hit all the clichés -- pot, alcohol, pills, drowning -- and it went on for an eternity.

Good stuff: -- For a film shot in only 17 days, it looked good. The camera work, set design, lighting, music all were excellent. -- The acting was solid, ranging from fair to very good, even outstanding in moments. The Baltimore and Dallas characters were so watered down, so one-dimensional in the film, neither actress had much to do. But both Troian Bellisario and Michelle Trachtenburg did well with what was given them. As a character, Carolina didn't fare much better. I thought Stana Katic did a good job overall. IMO her outstanding moments were when she was alone in the kitchen, in front of the mirror, and apologizing to Dallas for teasing her. What a tour de force it would have been to see what she could have done had they kept her character conscious while drugged. -- The Austin character was changed so much from the play that she was hardly recognizable. She's strong physically and psychologically in the play. The movie made her too weak, too much a sacrificial lamb. Still, Jess Weixler did an excellent job carrying the emotion throughout, although I tired of seeing her crying and victimized most of the time. -- Jacki Weaver's best scene was the letter-writing, which was not in the play.

Had I not been familiar with the play, I might have enjoyed the movie more. One word summary: Disappointing.
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7/10
Interesting title, but very good Lifetime movie! 7 Stars from me!
huggibear12 September 2017
This is a movie based upon a very controversial topic. Without giving too much away in the way of spoilers because their synopsis on this web page doesn't really give too much away either, all I want to say is kudos to the entire crew that worked on the production of this film. I'm certain many people consider their options in similar manners, but are too 'weak' to go through something like this. You have to watch this movie to form your own opinion though. Everyone will have their own take or spin on how they would have handled this. I think it's personal to the ones undergoing the 'diseases' and we should begin to heed their choices instead of our own personal choices. If we all had the freedom to make the choices we wanted to make on our own, without others, we'd be a much healthier world. But we tend to be too overbearing and controlling of others. People need their freedoms to move forward....or not! Let them be! Mother Mary will come to us speaking words of wisdom, let them be! Enjoy this film that is very well worth anyone's time to watch.
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10/10
Sister Cities must be seen by everyone with an suffering parent. Be prepared for deep thinking.
srogan-934-90877217 September 2016
Outstanding story, great directing, superb acting. As an aging parent, a lot for your kids to deal with. Cant say enough good things. Watch it, several times and buy it. ******** The fact that it was filmed in 17 days should make every big studio green with envy. To have such a great story, simple scenery, quickly directed and filmed and a top trending live tweeting fan club should also make them think again when they are approached with a new straight forward script. Doesn't have to be CGI to draw an audience. We of the older movie goers like stories that require quality acting to get the concept across. Don't need special effects in every scene to be worth the ticket.
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10/10
MORE LIKE THIS Hollywood, PLEASE!
brookeapurdy19 September 2016
SMART WOMEN. Smart women who are not defined by a male character. All of them- so well written and fleshed out. Lovely acting all around. Was enamored with Troyan Bellisario- whom I had never seen. Deftly directed with nuance and care. At times funny and others, gut-wrenching. But never fell into the stereotypical UBER-FEELY trap that many female driven fare can. Really just a total GEM of a film. Was at a screening where the audience was both laughing and crying, a successful story in my book. Was also wonderful to see Jackie Weaver in a lovely turn as their flawed but original matriarch.

BRAVO LIFETIME for backing SMART, FEMALE DRIVEN FARE!!
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5/10
Ultimately doesn't ring true
phd_travel17 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Liked the ensemble cast that includes Troian Bellisario of Pretty Little Liars but the story is ultimately unbelievable. It just doesn't ring true that a mother who is dying of illness wouldn't want to see her kids and say goodbye. The euthanasia assisted suicide matter aside that weakness is just the let down of this movie. And the burden placed on the caregiver daughter is kind of terrible.

I wouldn't say this is a bad movie it just feels like a waste of time.
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10/10
Genuinely Moving
Lynne-4619 September 2016
I was familiar with the brilliant play that inspired the film and was blown away with the adaptation. Four sisters grappling with the personal disappointments, their fraught relationship with their mother and each other, and with their mother's death. The actors are riveting, the entire experience gripping. Set on a lake, the story unfolds in a kind of "No Exit," environment, where the sisters are forced to remain as the uncomfortable hours click by, forced to face issues none wishes to face. The addition of more back story and appearance of some men in the women's lives adds wonderful dimension as well, each one played pitch perfect for their role. Fun bonus to see the stunning beauty that Cindy Crawford's daughter has grown to be, especially since she demonstrated wonderful acting chops. Another actor to watch, along with the rest of the superb and relatively new to seasoned cast. Highly recommend.
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1/10
Boring- to much fluffing around
NatashaBali23 August 2020
Decided to watch this after reading the reviews. But to be honest the movie doesn't build up until after 3/4 of the way, which is pointless Becasue then it is about to Finish by the time it builds up. There was to much fluffing around and uneccessary scenes before disclosing the reason the mum died. So boring and also slow. And this is not a thriller or mystery movie. It is only a family drama. And there is literally 1% mystery. Quite boring. .
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10/10
Life in all its messy, yet beautiful moments!
bobbiromans1 January 2017
Every now and then I see a movie or read a book that touches upon the soul. THIS is just suck a movie.

NO SPOILERS but life can be tragic one moment and hilarious the next.

The ups and downs are what make memories, form bonds and keep us on our toes.

This movie encompassed raw emotion during brutal yet magnificently messy, heartfelt moments. A beautiful story with flawed characters and flawless actresses!

Sadly, it touches on a truth which reminds us it often takes tragedy to bring families together.

The four sister unite during such an event and must learn to see each other in new, adult eyes and come to terms, each is vastly different in where their lives have gone.

Author-Bobbi Romans
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10/10
Stunning!
dancingdevsta20 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
An stunning film that will pull at your heartstrings as it touches upon the bond of four sisters and the quality of life of their mother who was living with a debilitating disease before she died.

The acting is stellar and the script draws you right in. Each sister has her own, very unique personality, but they rally together in the end for their mother's sake. They realized that that's what she would have wanted. I was in tears and deeply moved by the end of the movie. Definitely be prepared with tissues.

It's a beautiful indie film that everyone should feast their heart and eyes on!
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1/10
worse actresses ever
renatacarioca10 January 2017
worse actresses ever. couldn't buy one single scene of it. Totally forced and pretentious movie with bad actresses making faces and trying hard to convince they're serious. Didn't work. When the mother dies (that's given) you think something unexpected it's gonna happen, but it's just a sequence of clichés about old memories and irrelevant sister's issues. It really does not fabricate a deep meaning into it. The sisters characters are very superficially constructed and even their relationships looks fake from the start. The film failed to bring us something to actually deal with other than a mother dying and reuniting her kids to sort it out. Dialogues are bad, poorly convincing and the girl's different personalities are full of clichés. Really don't get how it's rated with more than three or four stars.
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10/10
Excellent story telling and acting
songperson25 September 2016
The story is riveting and the acting flawless. I loved this movie. And I saw a screening on the same weekend as I saw 2 big box-office films. This one way outshone the others in every way. The story was told with flashbacks in a way that revealed more and more of the linear story as the film progressed. The ensemble acting made you feel you were there with these sisters. And the scenes between each sister and mother deepened our understanding of each character. The screenwriter is not only a wonderful scriptwriter, but also a novelist and we get to know these characters in a way that is usually possible only in novels. There is humor, sometimes dark, but always real that comes from the story, never thrown in merely to break the tension.
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4/10
A Hollywood Morality Play
rdrfrm15 December 2016
The development of the characters in the movie was excellent. The plot moved along briskly, but the ending was not predictable. the movie unfolded piece by piece. Lots of dialogue, none of which was irrelevant and also lots of action, for a chick flick. All of which served the theme, which I will not reveal. But I will say is that this, for me, is what matters the most, and when I call it a Hollywood morality play, I'm talking about Hollywood morality. Sister Cities lays out a developing trend in American moral thinking that I believe is an aspect of the general degeneration of our society, and despite the fact that this movie is well crafted, I give it a 4.
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10/10
Finely crafted, this is funny, beautiful, and deeply touching
BonMacB20 September 2016
I agree with the other reviewers who have noted that this is a fabulous film filled with five strong female characters - the wildly different four sisters (named after cities) who come together after their mother's death. The writing is witty, suspenseful, and with deep character insight... there's not a cliché to be found in this script by Colette Freedman.It is by turns hilarious, touching, surprising, and gasp inducing. The four sisters are acted brilliantly, with Jess Weixler a standout as the writer who tanked after a single best seller, and went home to live with mom. It is she who shows (initially) the most courage, but where this brings the others will surprise you. .. Stana Katic is stunning as the ice princess eldest sister on track to be a judge, with Michelle Trachtenberg on point as a somewhat prissy, uptight woman who harbors her own secrets, and the effervescent Troian Bellisario as the youngest is simply a delight. Flashbacks show both the mom and three of the sisters much younger, and so the cast is almost entirely female (with small but well conceived roles featuring the always excellent Edward Molina and handsome Tom Everett Scott) making this a female dominated film in precisely the way that nearly all Hollywood films are male dominated. And guess what... It's fabulous. Agree with the other reviewer, more of these please.
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8/10
Not bad...
amanda-girven26 August 2018
Actually not a bad movie!!! Enjoyed the acting, the storyline was decent, and it was well thought out. Very nice Lifetime
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9/10
My kind of movie
mjanssens-1382821 October 2018
This my kind of movie with stereo type of characters. Strong women with each having their own problems.
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10/10
Powerful Movie
mlewis-0398520 September 2016
Amazing movie! There were so many twists and turns. The movie had everything you would want in a good movie. Excellent writing,directing and the actors were superb. Life is complicated and having a close family is so important which is what this movie is all about. This movie is for everyone. I have seen this as a play twice and then on the screen on Lifetime. I see something new each time I see it. The characters have so much depth to them. It is interesting how different the sisters are but how they all come together at the end of the mother's life. Even when a family is dysfunctional, forgiveness is the only thing that matters in the end. My favorite character was Austin. I felt she was the strongest of all the sisters. I felt myself crying and laughing throughout the movie. I also enjoyed the flashbacks.
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10/10
Excellent performances!
cecimartin2118 September 2016
Sister Cities is an excellent film, everybody in it shines. The subject matter is sure to bring some discussions. I highly recommend it. The chemistry between the four sisters is phenomenal and Jackie Weaver is superb! You'll find yourself laughing, crying and even getting angry with these complicated and very real characters. Everybody was perfectly cast, Jess, Michelle, Stana and Troian and perfect as sisters and even their younger versions are perfectly represented and that includes Amy Smart as the younger version of Jackie Weaver's character. So if you missed it when it aired on Lifetime, be on the look out for repeats and Netflix streaming soon, you really don't want to miss on this movie!
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10/10
So many feelings
asylumforimaginaryfriends20 September 2016
A lot of people were raving about this film so I was excited to watch it but also expected to be a little bit disappointed; as it turns out, the positive reviews were well deserved. This was a beautiful film with enough twists to keep you glued to the screen, and phenomenal acting by all involved. Each of the characters was quirky enough to be unique and memorable whilst still being easy to relate to. Having not seen the play, I approached the film with no knowledge of the plot line outside of the trailer. It's a tear-jerker, although there are laugh out loud moments, and I'm now eager to see this as a stage play as well. Fingers crossed Lifetime will release the film on DVD as I'd really love to watch it again and share with my own sisters, who I think would relate to different characters and appreciate the film in different ways. Beautiful. I have a lot of feelings right now!
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10/10
Beautiful, Touching Film
tietroupe20 September 2016
I'm always interested in seeing independent movies, and often find them much more absorbing than the much hyped blockbusters. Sister Cities proves to be one of the best independent films I have recently seen and one that I have enjoyed the most. This story of a family of dysfunctional sisters coming together after the death of their mother and in the process beginning to understand themselves and each other is beautifully crafted and extremely touching. And, although it is a film written by a woman primarily about women, it is universal in the exploration of grief and how our reactions to death are shaped by our choices in life.
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10/10
This was nice!
juanmuscle9 November 2021
This was really nice... I was a lil' hestitant , I don't know for sure why or where or what gave rise to these fallacious misgivings but after reading some of the imdb reviews I said OK, I'm going for it and I'm sure glad I did. This was really cool, it felt like a nice story was unfolding through the neat characters with interesting and compelling dialogue to boot! Cool job wish I could see the play! Nice writing fine acting and such would love to see more from these artists! Cool!
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10/10
What would you do?
francoischristana13 July 2021
If you knew someone with ALS and they asked you to end their misery because they were suffering is a hard decision to think about. Everyone has their own individual beliefs which will input on your choice. It's always important to keep in touch with your family members never know what they are going through and you end up regretting it once it's too late.
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8/10
Amazingly Sad
geohv-6779617 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
A movie about 4 daughters with 4 different father's and a mother stricken with ALS. The mother picks the one daughter that has no faith to steel her life to her her end hers (selfish and its worst). If you believe that the bible stories may be true and have actually read it you should realize that we are all trapped in a war between two beings both trying to prove that their way is better but only one can stop this and reset things and doesn't because being right is more important than doing right. With the story the bible tells no wonder there's so many with no faith. Who can actually travel in this world and see how complex and wonderful it is, look to the stars wondering of more life out there and believe that this is just a accident! Who can actually read the bible knowing that the so called being that inspired it has allowed billions of people to suffer and is so called a loving god, real parents protect their children. The laws of society are based on the laws of the bible so this movie has 4 sisters that are from one end to the other, if you don't have faith then it's easier to believe that the law is flawed but if you believe in the law and have faith than it's easier to think you have the right to judge your fellow humans. What a dilemma this movie created right within a family unit.
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