A Step Toward Tomorrow Explained

A Step Toward Tomorrow
Director:Deborah Reinisch
Music:Ron Ramin
Cinematography:Neil Roach
Editing:Scott Vickrey
Production Companies:Craig Anderson Productions
Runtime:93 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

A Step Toward Tomorrow is a 1996 drama film directed by Deborah Reinisch and starring Judith Light as a divorcee mother of paralyzed son. The film also starred Tom Irwin as neurosurgeon to help get him an experimental spinal-cord operation. The film also had special appearance by Alfre Woodard and a brief cameo by Christopher Reeve.

Plot

A divorcee moves her family cross-country to take her paralyzed son to a pioneer neurosurgeon.

Cast

Reception

Judith Light's performance drew critical praise.[1] [2] [3] John Voorhees from The Seattle Times "Judith Light is wholly believable as a fiercely loving divorced mother trying desperately to find help for her younger son, paralyzed after a diving accident. She tracks down a doctor and a clinic she feels holds out hope - only to find her health insurance doesn't cover the expensive operation that is needed. But that description is only the bare bones of "A Step Toward Tomorrow," which also has romance, humor and some mystery, as well, thanks to Tom Nursall and Harris Goldberg's solid script and Deborah Reinisch's sensitive direction. In addition to Light, who has never been better, there's a terrific performance by Tim Redwine, as the injured boy's older, caring brother, and by Tom Irwin, who seems an unlikely hero but is all the more convincing because of it. Kendall Cunningham is fine as the injured boy and Brad Dourif and Alfre Woodard score points in smaller roles."[3]

The film received two nominations at the 18th Youth in Film Awards.

References

  1. News: A Shining Light, A Reeve Cameo. The Washington Post. November 10, 1996. March 21, 2022.
  2. Web site: A Step Toward Tomorrow. Variety Staff. November 11, 1996.
  3. Web site: 'Same-Sex Marriage' Special Provides Valuable Insights | The Seattle Times. archive.seattletimes.com.