Directed by: Michael O. Sajbel
Premise: After a billionaire (James Garner) dies,
he leaves the inheritance of his fortune to Jason, his shallow and impatient
grandson (Drew Fuller), on the condition that Jason successfully accomplishes a
series of tasks designed to make him a better person.
What Works: The Ultimate Gift seems earnest
in its attempt to move the audience and share important life lessons. Although
it has a very sentimental and preachy premise, the film is able to stay real
enough to let the story stand out over the morals of the narrative.
What Doesn’t: The structure of the film makes it
episodic, but for most of the journey Jason does not change until the very end.
Most of his tasks and characters met do pay off later but Jason’s journey to
South America causes the film to switch gears radically in the second act of the
film, as though some other picture were mistakenly cut into the print. The back
story between Jason and his grandfather is not set up properly and without that
foundation it hurts the reconciliation that the film is moving toward. The film
does get extra gooey in parts, especially in the relationship between Jason and
a leukemia stricken child (Abigail Breslin). This subplot goes through the clichéd
dying child storyline where the hero is redeemed by the loss. Although
Breslin’s performance is good, the character is fairly stock and so are the
lessons to be learned from it.
Bottom Line: The Ultimate Gift is an average
film. It is a nice movie but it is so focused on being wholesome that it cannot
say anything original or interesting.