| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Jeff Bridges | ... | The Giver | |
| Meryl Streep | ... | Chief Elder | |
| Brenton Thwaites | ... | Jonas | |
| Alexander Skarsgård | ... | Father | |
| Katie Holmes | ... | Mother | |
| Odeya Rush | ... | Fiona | |
| Cameron Monaghan | ... | Asher | |
| Taylor Swift | ... | Rosemary | |
| Emma Tremblay | ... | Lilly | |
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Alexander Jillings | ... | Gabriel 12 Months |
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James Jillings | ... | Gabriel 12 Months |
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Jordan Nicholas Smal | ... | Gabriel 3 Months |
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Saige Fernandes | ... | Gabriel 6 Months |
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Renate Stuurman | ... | Dinah |
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Vanessa Cooke | ... | Elder |
After The Ruin, a civil but colorless, drug-dampened, equalitarian society eschewing memories of the past emerged, where everyone followed established rules of politeness enforced by a council of ever-watchful Elders. On the ceremonious day of graduation, teenagers leaving childhood are assigned careers chosen by the Elders. Jonas, who feels different from his appointed parents and his two best friends, Fiona and Asher, finds himself assigned to the rare position of Receiver of Memories, trained by a mentor (later called The Giver), who telepathically imparts memories of the world before The Ruin. Jonas learns emotions such as love, fear, excitement, loss and the concept of family, but when the planned elimination of a baby named Gabriel, whom he comes to love as a brother, enters his awareness, Jonas decides society needs to change, which the Chief Elder will do anything to stop. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil/revised by statmanjeff
saw 'the giver' last night at the fathom events screening. It was my favorite book growing up when i read it in school and maybe the reason I wasn't horribly disappointed was because it didn't even look great from the previews. nonetheless, i watched the movie. having recently read the book in preparation for the movie, the first thing that stood out to me was how quickly they jumped into the memories. It takes about ten chapters of the book to get there, and the movie gets there in less than ten minutes. it cuts out all the build up of the book and depending on how you like the speed of your films, this could be good or bad. this could pinpoint to why the movie didn't completely work. the script was rushed. it is definitely a case of 'when good actors happen to bad scripts'. because of the nature of the script (or because the nature of the movie, who knows?) the actors aren't given much to work with. this may not be their fault as the whole point of the story is a dystopian society where they don't allow you emotions, but to watch actors have straight faces for 94 minutes isn't exactly a pleasant experience. it leaves you feeling meh about the whole thing as i did. shame.