Winnie is a young girl who ran away from her mother's control, and suddenly Winnie found herself lost in a large forest near her home. There she meets a member of the family called Tucks, a guy named Jesse Tok, who is quite different and may have fallen in love with him from the first look. She lived with this good and strange family, but perhaps that family has a big secret and she has to decide whether she will stay with them or whether she will go to her first life.
10 September 1953, Palo Alto, California, USA
25 December 1949, Quitman, Texas, USA
11 May 1982, Orlando, Florida, USA
16 September 1981, Houston, Texas, USA
6 October 1963, Wilmington, Delaware, USA
10 May 1950, Alexandria, Virginia, USA
23 April 1970, Steinbach, Manitoba, Canada
December 29, 2010
Lovely version of the favorite middle-school book.
October 17, 2002
Any movie that signals the menace of a potential lynching by zooming its camera through the loop of a gallows noose cannot claim subtlety, but director Jay Russell never lets the swirling emotions of Tuck become too drippy.
October 15, 2002
Bledel and Jonathan Jackson's gorge-side canoodling drifts dangerously close to Blue Lagoon territory.
November 05, 2002
Harks back to a time when movies had more to do with imagination than market research.
October 14, 2002
A successful merger of the whimsical and the weird.
September 06, 2003
There is no life in the story, and what could be a thoughtful rumination on mortality offers only pat Disneyfied lessons.
July 10, 2003
Lambent, wholesome youth film, nothing short of magical, wherein a cosseted, cloistered lass escapes from her perennial confines of parental stuffiness .
December 30, 2008
The entire production bears a certain medicinal scent; it may be good for you, but it's not exactly tasty.
April 29, 2009
A really good and thought provoking film on life and true romance.
April 09, 2003
A great-looking film with beautiful scenery and some fine actors, but it lacks a good third act.
October 18, 2002
Those with the patience to submit to its low-energy charms may find their time well spent.
October 11, 2002
Its weighty themes are too grave for youngsters, but the story is too steeped in fairy tales and other childish things to appeal much to teenagers.

