![]() ![]() Not yet knowing the secret, she is captivated by this simple family that takes her in. ![]() Panicked, the family doesn’t know what to do with Winnie, and Winnie herself isn’t sure what to think. They’ve told no one outside their tight family in over a century, living as recluses in the woods on the edge of Treegap (filmed with sweeping cinematography in the Susquehanna State Park and Berlin, Maryland).īut one day teenaged Winnie Foster ( Alexis Bledel, “ Gilmore Girls”), trapped in a smothering life of sophistication and boredom, gets lost wandering in the woods her family owns and discovers young Jesse Tuck drinking from the spring. When accidents take place (like falling from a high tree with no injuries, being bit by a rattler but showing no effects of the poison, fighting wars but being invincible), the Tucks know they have a secret that must be protected at all costs. They realize something is strange from the first moment their lips touch the water… it’s like tasting heaven. In the early 19th century the Tucks-Angus ( William Hurt, “ A.I.”), Mae ( Sissy Spacek, “Crimes of the Heart”), Miles (Scott Bairstow, “Lonesome Dove,” “ The Postman”), and Jesse (Jonathan Jackson, “ Insomnia”)-inadvertently drink from a small spring at the bottom of a tree while traveling. That’s just what the Tuck family has done, not by conscious decision though. Why is that? Why do we hold youth, beauty and vitality as more important than age, experience and wisdom? If you could stay 30 forever, would you? Growing old is not an experience many look forward to. ![]() Perpetual youth-it’s what our culture wants. ![]()
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