| |
Los Angeles Times 11/28/1999 Television Review With O'Hara,
'Cab to Canada' Is Pleasant Ride Detouring sentiment and dodging potholes,
the character-driven TV movie "Cab to Canada" offers a smooth and pleasurable
ride, serving as a sturdy vehicle for the indomitable Maureen O'Hara.
Fueled by an actual incident, the film quickly gets into gear by introducing
gruff, gravel-voiced Mike (Jason Beghe), a Pasadena cabby whose latest
fare is the refined and rigid septuagenarian Katherine (0' Hara) Though
the principals mesh like oil and water, Katherine's big tips are enticing
enough to make Mike drive to Malibu following the funeral of her friend,
a woman who died without ever embracing a sense of adventure. With that
in mind, Katherine orders Mike to push on northward, making stops in Santa
Barbara, Carmel, San Francisco, Seattle and beyond, which comes as no
surprise given the title. Along the route of their occasionally bumpy
3,100-mile journey, the characters expectedly warm to each other, with
Katherine coming to appreciate the loyalty and commitment of Mike, who
in turn grasps the importance of her cherished memories with loved ones.
Back home, meanwhile, Mike's understanding girlfriend ("JAG's" Catherine
Bell) keeps a watchful eye over a cynical, independent youngster (Haley
Joel Osment) with a self-absorbed single mother who thinks nothing of
shirking her responsibility in a bid to find Mr. Right. Though the outcome
in the appealing teleplay by Dalene Young is readily predictable and the
final scene at Katherine's home tends to be a tad puzzling, the trip itself
is a highly enjoyable one. As always, the iron-willed O'Hara has a commanding
presence, but Beghe manages to hold his own each mile of the way. Bell
and Osment also give good performances under the leisurely direction of
Christopher Leitch.
Amazing Catherine Bell
|