What Was the Movie Bridge to Terabithia That Wasnt in the Book

2007 film by Gábor Csupó

Bridge to Terabithia
A boy standing beside a girl who is crouched before a small river and holding a lamp.

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Gábor Csupó
Screenplay by
  • David L. Paterson
  • Jeff Stockwell
Based on Bridge to Terabithia
past Katherine Paterson
Produced by
  • David L. Paterson
  • Lauren Levine
  • Hal Lieberman
Starring
  • Josh Hutcherson
  • AnnaSophia Robb
  • Bailee Madison
  • Robert Patrick
  • Zooey Deschanel
Cinematography Michael Chapman
Edited by John Gilbert
Music past Aaron Zigman

Product
company

Walden Media[one]

Distributed by Buena Vista Pictures Distribution (United states of america)
Tiptop Amusement (International)

Release date

  • February 16, 2007 (2007-02-sixteen)

Running time

95 minutes[2]
State United states[1]
Language English language
Budget $17 1000000[3] [4]
Box office $137.6 one thousand thousand[4]

Span to Terabithia is a 2007 American fantasy drama directed past Gábor Csupó and written past David L. Paterson and Jeff Stockwell. It is based on the 1977 novel of the same name past Katherine Paterson. The movie, starring Josh Hutcherson, AnnaSophia Robb, Robert Patrick, Bailee Madison, and Zooey Deschanel, follows two 11-year-old neighbors who create a fantasy world called Terabithia to cope with reality and spend their free time together in an abandoned tree house.

The original novel was based on events from the childhood of the author'due south son, screenwriter David Paterson. When he asked his mother if he could write a screenplay of the novel, she agreed in part because of his ability equally a playwright. Produced by Walden Media and Klasky Csupo, principal photography was shot in Auckland, New Zealand, within 60 days. Film editing took ten weeks, while post-product, music mixing, and visual furnishings took several months, with the film fully completed by Nov 2006. This was Michael Chapman'south last moving-picture show every bit cinematographer before his retirement and eventual death in 2020.

Bridge to Terabithia was theatrically released in the United states of america on February 16, 2007 by Walt Disney Pictures. The film received positive reviews from critics who praised the visuals, performances and faithfulness to the source material. It was a box-part success, grossing $137.6 one thousand thousand worldwide against its budget of $20–25 million. At the 29th Immature Creative person Awards, the film won all v awards for which it was nominated.

Plot [edit]

Jesse "Jess" Aarons is an xi-year-erstwhile aspiring artist living with his financially struggling family in Lark Creek. He rides the bus to school with his younger sister, May Belle, where he avoids the school bully, Janice Avery. In grade, Jess is bullied by classmates Scott Hoager and Gary Fulcher and meets a new student named Leslie Shush. At recess, Jess enters a running event, for which he has been preparation at home. Leslie also enters and manages to win, much to Jess' irritation. On the way home, Jess and Leslie learn they are next-door neighbors.

Afterwards that day, it is discovered that Jess has a difficult relationship with his male parent, who spends more than time with May Belle. Due to their financial struggles, his female parent also forces him to clothing his older sis'due south sneakers. One day at schoolhouse, Leslie compliments Jess' cartoon ability and they become friends. Afterward school, they venture into the wood and swing beyond a creek on a rope. Jess and Leslie notice an abandoned treehouse on the other side and invent a new world, which they phone call Terabithia. For the next few days, Jess and Leslie spend their free fourth dimension in the treehouse getting to know each other.

Leslie gives Jess an art kit on his altogether. Jess becomes aroused with his male parent for his attitude towards him and he loses his belief in Terabithia, and refuses its existence the adjacent solar day at schoolhouse. Later, Jess apologizes to Leslie by giving her a puppy, whom she names Prince Terrien (P.T). One time in Terabithia, they meet diverse creatures, including a giant troll resembling Janice, squirrel-similar creatures resembling Hoager, whom they name the 'Sqoagers', and 'Hairy Vultures' resembling Fulcher. At schoolhouse, Leslie becomes frustrated past Janice Avery's bullying. Jess and Leslie play a prank on Janice, and she is embarrassed in front of everyone on the omnibus. Leslie introduces Jess to her parents and they assistance pigment their house. At school, Leslie discovers from Janice that her bullying is due to her abusive male parent, and the two get friends, with Janice after befriending Jess as well. Jess and Leslie take P.T to Terabithia, where they fight off several creatures resembling their bullies, this time with the troll equally their marry.

The side by side morning, Ms. Edmunds, the music teacher who Jess has a crush on, calls to invite him on a one-on-one field trip to an art museum. When Jess returns home, his begetter reveals that Leslie died after hitting her caput in the creek when the rope she used snapped. Jess first denies information technology and runs to check on Leslie, but he notices the severed rope as well every bit emergency vehicles surrounding her firm before eventually accepting her death.

The following day, Jess and his parents visit the Burke family to pay their respects. Leslie'south father, Bill Burke, tells Jess she loved him, and cheers him for being the all-time friend she ever had, since she never had friends at her one-time school. Jess feels overwhelming guilt for Leslie's death, lashing out at both Hoager and May Belle, and imagining the "Dark Master" from Terabithia chasing afterwards him before breaking downwards into tears, but his father comforts and consoles him by telling him to keep Leslie's memory alive. Jess decides to re-imagine Terabithia and builds a span across the river to welcome a new ruler. He invites May Belle to Terabithia and the two agree to rule over Terabithia, with Jess equally male monarch and May Belle every bit the princess.

Cast [edit]

  • Josh Hutcherson every bit Jess Aarons
  • AnnaSophia Robb as Leslie Burke
  • Bailee Madison equally May Belle Aarons
  • Robert Patrick equally Jack Aarons
  • Kate Butler as Mary Aarons
  • Zooey Deschanel as Ms. Edmunds
  • Latham Gaines as Neb Burke
  • Judy McIntosh as Judy Burke
  • Lauren Clinton every bit Janice Avery
  • Cameron Wakefield every bit Scott Hoager
  • Elliot Lawless as Gary Fulcher
  • Isabelle Kircher as Carla
  • Carly Owen as Madison
  • Patricia Aldersley as Grandma Burke
  • Jen Wolfe as Mrs. Myers (Teacher)
  • James Gaylyn as Principal Turner
  • Phil Grieve as Mr Bailey
  • Ian Harcourt every bit Kenny (autobus driver)
  • Devon Woods as Brenda Aarons
  • Emma Fenton as Ellie Aarons
  • Grace Brannigan every bit Joyce Aarons
  • Paddy as Prince Terrien

Production [edit]

Overview [edit]

Production for the film began on Feb 20, 2006,[five] with a budget of $20–25 meg.[3] [4] Principal photography for the film was shot in Auckland, New Zealand within 60 days.[three] [6] Film editing took ten weeks, while post-product, music mixing, and visual effects took a few months. The film was finished by Nov 2006, because the crew "had to rush" to meet the February xvi borderline.[3] The film was directed by Nickelodeon's Rugrats co-creator and former Hanna-Barbera animator Gábor Csupó, who was first recommended for the job by Walden Media President Cary Granat. Although Csupó had never worked on a live-action film earlier, it "didn't worry Granat in the least".[7] Csupó stated that he was interested in making the moving-picture show considering he "had the appetite to do a live-activity film for a long time", just that he "didn't like annihilation until I read this book". He described the volume as "cute" and said that it "moved [him]".[viii] Span to Terabithia was cinematographer Michael Chapman's final film before his retirement. Chapman mentioned in the moving-picture show's DVD commentary that he retired after shooting this motion-picture show because he wanted his final film to be a good one; "this is such a beautiful story, and it's exactly the kind of picture show I want to exercise at this time in my life".[ix]

Casting [edit]

Director Csupó stated that they had no actors initially in heed for the moving picture. The first actor cast was AnnaSophia Robb as Leslie Burke. Robb wrote Csupó "such a beautiful, heartwarming letter of the alphabet" that expressed her love for the book and the graphic symbol. Csupó said that he cast her because of "her letter, her enthusiasm, and her dearest of the material". Robb also conversed with producer Lauren Levine earlier casting even began, and "their chat convinced her that, without a doubt, AnnaSophia was meant for this role". Levine said that "it was just so clear in talking to her about all this fantasy that I was basically talking to Leslie, that she had that same kind of spark and magical presence. She might be physically unlike from Leslie in the book, but the spirit of Leslie and the spirit of AnnaSophia are virtually identical. Information technology was a match made in heaven."[9] With regard to the character, Robb said "[Leslie]'s 1 of those people who's only always lit up, who has this glow about her, and no 1 can bring her downwards. Leslie'due south such a lively and energetic character, it was actually fun for me to go her."[10]

Levine stated that "looking for Jesse was a really tough hunt. We needed someone who could go from an introverted boy in an isolated world to someone who completely taps into his imagination and becomes a confident, brave leader in Terabithia. That's a heck of a range for such a young actor."[9] Josh Hutcherson was non their beginning selection for the function of Jesse Aarons, but they settled with him because they "felt the chemistry between AnnaSophia Robb and him".[seven] Hutcherson said that the projection appealed to him because of "the existent life day-to-day drama as well every bit the arc of the grapheme Jesse".[xi]

The filmmakers cast Robert Patrick as Jess'due south hardworking and strict begetter based on his previous roles in the films Walk the Line, Flags of Our Fathers, and the television series The Unit. Patrick explained that he related to the story because he was "constantly creating imaginary worlds as a kid" himself, and that the film'due south setting reminded him of where he grew upwards. He also said that he took on the role because he wanted to star in a film that his children could watch.[nine]

Csupó said that they cast Bailee Madison as May Belle Aarons after weeks of searching for an actress to play the role. He went on to say that "she had such a charm, even before the camera, she was just like a little sweetheart. She was very confident, she showed up, shook hands with everybody, totally sweetness and perky. I said 'WOW!'—she was just stealing everybody's heart on the spot."[3]

Design and effects [edit]

Csupó explained that "it was a very witting conclusion from the very commencement that we're not going to overdo the visual furnishings because of the story'southward integrity and the book's integrity", because at that place was just a cursory mention of Jess and Leslie fighting imaginary creatures in the forest in the novel. With that in mind, they "tried to do the absolute minimum, which would be required to put information technology into a picture version".[seven]

In designing the fantasy creatures found in Terabithia, Csupó wanted to brand creatures that were "little more cocked, imaginative, fantastical creatures than the typical rendered characters you see in other movies", and drew inspiration from Terry Gilliam and Ridley Scott. Dima Malanitchev came up with the drawings for the creatures with Csupó'south guidance.[8] Csupó chose to take Weta Digital render the 3D animation because he "was impressed with their artistic integrity, the teamwork, the [fact that] people were actually dainty, and also they responded to our designs very positively". Weta modified some of the creature designs, but ultimately remained faithful to Csupó'southward original designs.[8]

There were around 100 crew members from Weta working on the effects for the film. Weta was already working on animating the creatures while the motion-picture show was being shot, and Weta coiffure members were on-set for all the scenes that involved special effects during the filming. Weta visual furnishings supervisor Matt Aitken explained that process involved in interpreting the creatures was "carve up into ii steps". Showtime, natural-looking creatures were created based on pencil sketches by Csupó and Malanitchev, and this was washed mostly through Photoshop collages done past visual effects art director Michael Pangrazio. The 2d step was to effigy out animation or motion styles that best suited these creatures.[5]

Leslie'southward costumes in the motion-picture show were designed to look as if the grapheme "might have made some of them herself", and they were updated from those described in the volume to reflect what would currently be considered eccentric.[12]

Writing [edit]

Producer and screenwriter David 50. Paterson is the novel's author's son, and his proper noun was featured on its dedication page. The story was based on his real-life all-time friend, Lisa Hill, who was struck past lightning and killed when they were both 8 years erstwhile.[13] [fourteen] Paterson had asked his mother, Katherine Paterson, if he could write a screenplay of the novel, and she agreed "non but because he's [her] son, but also because he's a very good playwright". Paterson had difficulty marketing the screenplay, mostly because of Leslie'south expiry; "if you can believe this, I did meet with some companies that asked if I could just 'injure' Leslie a trivial flake—put her in a lite coma and and so bring her out".[15]

The most important thing for Paterson was to continue the spirit of the volume live while finding a way to transform information technology from "a novel that takes identify mostly in the characters' heads to a dynamic visual medium". Paterson knew that the film had to be about friendship and imagination.[9] While Paterson focused on "bringing out the emotions of the story," he admitted to having difficulty writing well-nigh Terabithia "considering it was too shut". He credited fellow screenwriter Jeff Stockwell for recreating Terabithia for the film. "What Jeff was able to do every bit an outsider who wasn't so fastened to the story was to really let his imagination go free and brand upwards this globe in a wonderful style", David said. Csupó noted that the two master characters are a little bit older in the film than they are in the volume. Csupó reasons that the movie "deals with and then many problems including friendship, and peradventure first innocent love, things similar that", so information technology "made more sense" to make the characters older.[7]

Soundtrack [edit]

Bridge to Terabithia
Soundtrack album by

Aaron Zigman

Released February 13, 2007
Recorded 2006
Genre Soundtrack, popular, rock
Length 23:28
Label Hollywood
Producer Aaron Zigman
Aaron Zigman film scores chronology
Flicka
(2006)
Bridge to Terabithia
(2007)
Pride
(2006)
Singles from Bridge to Terabithia
  1. "Keep Your Mind Wide Open"
    Released: Feb xiii, 2007

The film features a musical score by Aaron Zigman, who was hired after Alison Krauss backed out of the job.[16] Zigman mentioned that there are similarities between the music he composed for Bridge to Terabithia and the film Flicka in that "...at times there's a bit of a Celtic influence but not much", but he also went on to say that at that place was a more modernistic feel to the music he composed for Bridge to Terabithia.[17] He did and so as Csupó requested him to not compose "your typical Hollywood Score"; he then mixed upwardly orchestral melody with "a chip of a modern flavour."[xviii] The score he equanimous for the film is described equally "very large" compared to his other work, and Zigman commented that "Aside from the minimalist stuff and coloring that I love to practise, I also like big orchestral stuff, and want to do more of that, and this film enabled me to spread my wings out a scrap." The official soundtrack for the picture was released as Music from and Inspired by Span to Terabithia by Hollywood Records on February 13, 2007.[17]

Track listing
No. Championship Length
1. "I Learned from You" (performed past Miley Cyrus; written by Matthew Gerrard and Steve Diamond) 3:24
2. "Try" (performed by Hayden Panettiere; written past Gerrard, Robbie Nevil and Mike Krompass) 3:19
iii. "Go along Your Mind Wide Open up" (performed by AnnaSophia Robb; written by Dave Bassett and Michelle Featherstone) three:36
4. "A Identify for Us" (performed by Leigh Nash and Tyler James; written by Bryan Adams, Eliot Kennedy, and Aaron Zigman) 4:01
five. "Another Layer" (performed by Jon McLaughlin; written by Adams, Kennedy, and Zigman) iii:30
half dozen. "Polish" (performed past The Skies of America; written by Robert Bonfiglio) 3:52
7. "Look Through My Eyes" (performed by Everlife; written by Phil Collins) iii:11
eight. "Right Here" (written and performed by Jeremy Camp) 4:13
9. "When Y'all Dear Someone" (performed by Bethany Dillon; written by Dillon and Ed Cash) 3:30
ten. "Seeing Terabithia" (written by Zigman) one:07
11. "Into the Wood" (written by Zigman) 5:59
12. "The Boxing" (written by Zigman) 6:12
13. "Jesse's Bridge" (written past Zigman) one:34
Total length: 23:28

Notes [edit]

  • "I Learned from You" is originally sung with Billy Ray Cyrus from the Hannah Montana soundtrack. This is a new version without Billy Ray Cyrus and with unlike lyrics.
  • "Look Through My Eyes", "Right Hither" and "When You Dear Someone" are not heard in the film. "Look Through My Eyes" is originally from Disneymania 4, "Right Here" is from Camp'south anthology Stay and "When You Dearest Someone" is from Bethany Dillon's album So Far: The Acoustic Sessions.
  • The Five Stairsteps' "O-o-h Child", Steve Earle's "Someday" and War's "Why Tin can't We Be Friends?", sung past Zooey Deschanel and the cast of school children in the motion-picture show, do not appear on the anthology.
  • Mandy Moore's "Top of the World" is heard in the flick, but not included on the soundtrack.

Release [edit]

Marketing and promotion [edit]

The promotion and advertising for the film was met with criticism and controversy. The filmmakers distanced themselves from the advertisement campaign for the moving-picture show, saying that it was deliberately misleading and made the pic seem to be most, or occurring in, a fantasy world.[nineteen] David Paterson was surprised by the trailer, but understood the marketing reasoning backside it, saying:

Although there is a generation that is very familiar with the volume, if you lot are over 40, then yous probably haven't, and we demand to achieve them. [...] Anybody who read the book and sees the trailer says, 'What is this? This is nothing like the book. What are you doing, Dave?' And I say, 'You lot know what you're seeing is 15 seconds of a 90-minute motion picture. Give me a little elbowroom and respect. Go meet it, and then tell me what you lot think.[19]

Critics commented on the film'south misleading advertizing campaign. Ane critic said the film was really "grounded in reality far more than in fantasy",[20] while another thought, "far from a computer generated escapist fantasy, this picture is an unpretentious and touching tale of preteen companionship and loss".[21]

Distribution [edit]

The motion picture premiered at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood on February xvi, 2007.[22] Paterson, an alumnus of the Catholic University of America, held a special advance screening of the film for members of the CUA customs at the AFI Silver Theatre in Silver Leap, Maryland on February ane, 2007.[23] The moving picture opened in the United kingdom on May 4, 2007, and in New Zealand June 7, 2007.[24] The picture show had a stiff second place domestic opening over the Presidents' 24-hour interval weekend, grossing "a higher-than-expected" $28,536,717 from 2,284 screens, earning an average of $nine,885 per screen.[25] The opening Fri box office was $6.three million.[26] The film has a worldwide gross of Us$137 million, taking in $82 million in the U.s. and Canada.[four]

The DVD and Blu-ray Disc were released on June nineteen, 2007 in the Us. The DVD and high-definition Blu-ray version shared the same special features; including: "Digital Imagination: Bringing Terabithia to Life", "Backside the Book: The Themes of Span to Terabithia", "Keep Your Heed Wide Open up" music video by Robb, and two sound commentaries, the start with director Gábor Csupó, author Jeff Stockwell, and producer Hal Lieberman, and the second with producer Lauren Levine and actors Hutcherson and Robb.[27]

Reception [edit]

Critical reception [edit]

AnnaSophia Robb'south portrayal of Leslie Shush was highly praised; one critic enjoyed her "engaging" performance", and idea "only the story's vibrant immature heroine [...] draws us in enough to care"[28]

Bridge to Terabithia received positive reviews from film critics. Review assemblage website Rotten Tomatoes gives the moving picture a score of 85% based on 158 reviews, with an boilerplate rating of 7.2/10. The site's consensus reads: "Span to Terabithia is a faithful adaptation of a love children'south novel and a powerful portrayal of love, loss, and imagination through children's eyes."[29] On Metacritic the film received a weighted average score of 74% based on 25 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[thirty] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the picture a grade of A−.[31] [32]

James Berardinelli of ReelViews called Bridge to Terabithia "easily the best family feature of the early on twelvemonth".[33] Ann Hornaday of The Washington Mail praised the script for existence "utterly recognizable and authentic", and thought Robb and Hutcherson were "perfectly cast". Hornaday wrote that although the terminal v minutes succumbed to "oversweet sentiment", viewers would retrieve the film'due south "warmth and respect with which information technology pays homage to first love".[34] Jessica Grose of The Hamlet Voice commended director Csupó for omitting "cutesy tween stereotypes", and felt Jess'due south relationship with his begetter elevated Bridge to Terabithia from "a good kids flick to a archetype contender."[21] The New York Times critic Jeannette Catsoulis believed that the fantasy was kept in the groundwork "to find magic in the everyday", and thought Csupó directed "like someone intimate with the pain of being different, assuasive each personality more than a unmarried feature". The reviewer praised all the leads for their potent performances, especially Deschanel and Madison. Catsoulis constitute the film was able to handle developed topics "with dash and sensitivity", and beingness consistently smart and "delicate as a spider web", information technology was the kind of children's movie "rarely seen nowadays".[twenty] Miriam di Nunzio of the Chicago Lord's day-Times praised Hutcherson and Robb's performances, proverb that "the moving-picture show'south heart and soul rests on the abilities of its young lead characters to make us really see the world through children'southward eyes. The dynamic duo of Hutcherson and Robb exercise not disappoint."[35]

Non all reviews were every bit positive, Claudia Puig of United states Today wrote that "for a flick virtually the power of imagination, Bridge to Terabithia is non as clever as you would hope". Puig chosen the film a "serviceable translation" of the novel, but thought the developed characters were caricatured. Puig constitute the real-life portions of the movie were "derivative and simplistic", but found Jess's emotional tumult felt "powerfully accurate, and this is where the picture finds its truth and soul".[28] The Wall Street Journal critic Joe Morgenstern felt that despite the occasional misuse of enchantment—"brief spasms of overproduced fantasy"—the novel'southward screen adaptation was told with "agreeable simplicity in between figurer-generated monsters". Morgenstern was disappointed with the performances by the immature members of the cast, which he described every bit "appealing merely unpolished". Morgenstern thought Csupó lacked feel directing actors, and that although Deschanel was the all-time adult performer, she seemed self-directed.[36] Amusement Weekly 'due south Gregory Kirschling was confused past the main characters' lack of excitement towards Terabithia, and felt the film could non decide if information technology was "a fantasy or a coming-of-age story".[37]

Accolades [edit]

Bridge to Terabithia was nominated for 7 awards, of which it won five. Josh Hutcherson was nominated at the 2008 Saturn Awards for "Best Performance by a Younger Role player".[38] AnnaSophia Robb was nominated for a Broadcast Moving picture Critics Association Accolade for "Best Young Actress".[39] The film won 5 awards at the Immature Artist Awards, including "Best Family Feature Film (Fantasy or Musical)". Hutcherson won "Best Performance in a Feature Motion picture – Leading Immature Actor", Robb won "All-time Performance in a Feature Moving picture – Leading Young Actress", and Bailee Madison won "All-time Performance in a Feature Flick – Young Actress Age Ten or Younger". The cast won the award for "All-time Performance in a Feature Picture – Young Ensemble Bandage", which included Hutcherson, Robb, Madison, Wakefield, Clinton, Lawless, Isabelle Rose Kircher, Carly Owen, Devon Wood, Emma Fenton and Grace Brannigan.[40]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Span to Terabithia". American Motion picture Establish . Retrieved February 26, 2017.
  2. ^ "BRIDGE TO TERABITHIA | British Board of Film Classification". bbfc.co.united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland.
  3. ^ a b c d eastward "Movie Jungle Interviews - Bridge to Terabithia Interviews - Gabor Csupo & David Paterson". Moving-picture show Jungle. Archived from the original on April 3, 2007. Retrieved April 27, 2009.
  4. ^ a b c d "Bridge to Terabithia". The Numbers. Nash Information Services. Retrieved July 26, 2014.
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  14. ^ Kohn, Diana (2004). "Lisa Hill and the Bridge to Terabithia (Internet Archive version)". Takoma Voice. Archived from the original on May 22, 2006. Retrieved Apr 25, 2009.
  15. ^ Oleck, Joan (February 2007). "Bridge to Terabithia Hits the Big Screen". School Library Journal. 53 (2): 20.
  16. ^ Larson, Randall (July 13, 2006). "Zigman hired to compose score for Span to Terabithia". Mania.com. Archived from the original on November x, 2010. Retrieved April 27, 2009.
  17. ^ a b "SoundtrackNet : Interview - Aaron Zigman". SoundtrackNet. February 2007. Retrieved Apr 27, 2009.
  18. ^ Schweiger, Daniel (February 19, 2007). "Crossing the Bridge" (PDF). Moving picture Music Weekly. Global Media Development Group (3): half dozen–7. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
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  22. ^ "'Bridge to Teribithia' Essay Contest Offers Big Prizes to Students and Teachers Exclusively at Hollywood's El Capitan Theatre from ii/16 – three/29". Business Wire. February 6, 2007. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
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  30. ^ "Bridge to Terabithia". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 2, 2009.
  31. ^ "Bridge TO TERABITHIA (2007) A-". CinemaScore. Archived from the original on 2018-12-20.
  32. ^ Nicole Sperling (February 21, 2007). "'Ghost' afire with $52 mil; 'Terabithia' adds to bounty". The Hollywood Reporter. "Terabithia," a Walt Disney Co. co-production with Walden Media, received an A− from audiences, according to exit pollster CinemaScore.
  33. ^ Berardinelli, James (2007). "Review: Bridge to Terabithia". ReelViews. Retrieved Apr 25, 2009.
  34. ^ Hornaday, Ann (February 16, 2007). "Bridge: Crossing Into The Heart of Babyhood". The Washington Mail . Retrieved May 3, 2009.
  35. ^ Di Nunzio, Miriam (February 16, 2007). "Imagination triumphs in Span to Terabithia". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on February 18, 2007. Retrieved April 30, 2009.
  36. ^ Morgenstern, Joe (February 16, 2007). "Film Review". The Wall Street Journal . Retrieved June 21, 2014.
  37. ^ Kirschling, Gregory (February xiv, 2007). "Bridge to Terabithia (2007)". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved May 3, 2009.
  38. ^ a b Olson, Dale. "The Saturn Awards (Presented past The University of Scientific discipline Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films)". Saturn Honour. Archived from the original on December eleven, 2009. Retrieved May two, 2009.
  39. ^ a b "Into the Wild leads Critics' Selection nominations". U.s.a. Today. December 11, 2007. Retrieved May 2, 2009.
  40. ^ a b "29th Annual Young Artist Awards – Nominations/Special Awards". Immature Creative person Honour. Archived from the original on July half dozen, 2008. Retrieved May 2, 2009.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Bridge to Terabithia at IMDb
  • Bridge to Terabithia at AllMovie
  • Bridge to Terabithia at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Bridge to Terabithia at Box Function Mojo

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_to_Terabithia_%282007_film%29

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