Prayers for Bobby

2009

Action / Biography / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Sigourney Weaver Photo
Sigourney Weaver as Mary Griffith
Susan Ruttan Photo
Susan Ruttan as Betty Lambert
Austin Nichols Photo
Austin Nichols as Ed Griffith
Lee Garlington Photo
Lee Garlington as Psychologist
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
821.4 MB
1270*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
P/S 1 / 4
1.65 GB
1920*1088
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 29 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by oaksong9 / 10

Will it reach them?

It would be so wonderful if the people that this piece is about actually watched it and understood what kind of hell they're putting their kids in for no particularly good reason.

It should be required viewing in every Baptist church on the planet. And there are a few other evangelical organizations with strange ideas about human beings who might learn something.

I will be surprised if Sigourney Weaver doesn't get at least an Emmy nomination, particularly given the speech she gives to the city council, both well written and well delivered.

Ryan Kelly also delivers a believable performance as Bobby, regardless of some of the cutting required to get the film into a two hour programming window.

Reviewed by bkoganbing9 / 10

A Child Is Listening, Maybe Your Own

The greatest thing about Sigourney Weaver and the rest of the cast members who played members of the Griffith family is that in making Prayers For Bobby they did not succumb to the temptation of making a caricature of their character. It's been done before, it would have been so easy, the religious right gives you so much material.

But the Griffith family Harry Czerny, Sigourney Weaver and their children aren't bad people. All they have done is sit back quite comfortably on the assurance of their faith that GLBT people are not quite normal, they are afflicted with some deadly mind disease that God does not approve of. And there a lot of people who will go to their graves thinking that, though the amount shrinks as time goes on.

You can have a lot of smug assumptions until the problem hits home with you. Which is what happens to the Griffith family when young Ryan Kelley as Bobby Griffith comes out to his brother who promptly rats him out to his mother. After that its the attempts to search for a cure or as writer Wayne Besen has so aptly put it, 'pray the gay away'.

I've known a lot of people who were survivors of such colossal ignorance as preached by the religious right. Here in my native Buffalo, I know one young man who moved here two years ago and he grew up in the Assemblies of God Church. It took him a long time to break free and realize his self worth, but his is a lot happier a story than what happens to Mary Griffith and her son.

Another man whom I had a relationship with back in New York when I lived there was a survivor of electroshock treatment. It was thought that would cure him by his parents who were from the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. It was this or kick him out of the house and disown him which is what eventually happened. I'm sure they thought they were doing the best for their kid.

When I worked at Crime Victims Board I had a mugging case of a young kid in Central Park. But what had happened to him was that he had come out to his enlightened parents and they threw him out of the house. This was not a street smart kid, he lived on the upper east side of Manhattan and went to prep school. He was staying in Central Park that night and got mugged and I got the case from a shelter in New York. I know his plans were to go to a girl's house he knew where her parents were more accepting eventually. I never did find out if he made it.

I can tell you first hand that the Griffith experience is far from an isolated one. Gay/Lesbian/BiSexual/Transgender youth are far more at risk for suicide than their straight peers. But what makes the Griffith story unique is how they and especially Mary Griffith took a mind numbing tragedy and turned it into a position of advocacy for those who too often don't get it. That is the challenge that Sigourney Weaver in her performance shows that Mary Griffith and her family met and overcame.

Sigourney's final speech before her small town council advocating plans for a Gay Pride Day will move all of you. It might even cause some on the religious right to question their smug assumptions about us. That is my prayer for Bobby.

And this film review is dedicated to all of the case examples I knew from my professional and personal life and to one other. A young lady from Warsaw, New York who had the courage to break from her fundamentalist family and seek love and acceptance in a wider more tolerant place on this globe. I wish I had her guts when I was a teen.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle6 / 10

sincere Lifetime movie

It's 1979 Walnut Creek, California. Bobby Griffith is confused sexually. His grandma is homophobic. He breaks up with his girlfriend. His older brother Ed finds him trying to commit suicide. His sister Joy and father Robert (Henry Czerny) try to be supportive. On the other hand, his religious mother Mary (Sigourney Weaver) refuses to accept it and actively tries to change him. It's a struggle until he goes to stay with his accepting cousin Jeanette. He starts dating David but his inner turmoil sends him to kill himself. Mary is devastated and searches for meaning with progressive Rev. Whitsell (Dan Butler).

It's a sincere Lifetime movie. The first half is very straight melodrama. The second half has Mary preaching. Sigourney Weaver does some big time acting. This is an issue sermon movie. It's more concentrated on that especially the second half.

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