The Baby-Sitters Club (film)

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The Baby-Sitters Club

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Melanie Mayron
Produced by Peter O. Almond, Jane Startz
Written by Dalene Young
Starring Schuyler Fisk,
Bre Blair,
Rachael Leigh Cook,
Larisa Oleynik,
Stacy Linn Ramsower
Zelda Harris
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) August 18, 1995
Running time 85 min
Language English
IMDb profile

The Baby-Sitters Club is a 1995 family film directed by Melanie Mayron. It is based upon The Baby-sitters Club series of books and is about one summer in the girls' lives in the fictional town of Stoneybrook, Connecticut. The movie features actresses and actors who were unknown at the time.

Contents

[edit] Cast

  • Schuyler Fisk as Kristy Thomas (13 yrs), the tomboy and the president of the club
  • Bre Blair as Stacey McGill (13 yrs), the glamorous, sophisticated one
  • Rachael Leigh Cook as Mary Anne Spier (13 yrs), the shy, sensitive one; Dawn's stepsister.
  • Larisa Oleynik as Dawn Schafer (13 yrs), the environmentalist
  • Tricia Joe as Claudia Kishi (13 yrs), the creative, artistic one
  • Stacy Linn Ramsower as Mallory Pike (11 yrs), the insecure redheaded one
  • Zelda Harris as Jessi Ramsey (11 yrs), the dancer

Other cast members include:

[edit] Plot

The girls start a summer camp for the local children.

Kristy Thomas, a twelve-year-old tomboy, and President of the Babysitter's Club, comes up with an idea to open a day camp for their child clients. Her best friend, Mary Anne Spier along with stepsister Dawn Schafer, offer their parents' back yard to serve as the camp site. All of the club members (Kristy, Mary Anne, Dawn, Jessi, Mallory Pike, Stacey McGill and Claudia Kishi) vow to keep a close eye out for misbehaving kids, which would later include Kristy's younger brother, David Michael.

Meanwhile, Kristy faces problems when she meets her estranged father (who abandoned her family seven years ago), and faces a dilemma about telling her friends and family about this. Mary Anne is the only one she tells of the visit, and she too is under pressure as the curiosity of her friends grows. Claudia is stuck in summer school and is forced to retake a test, or face repeating a grade and being forced to drop out of the club. Stacey McGill has a crush on a seventeen-year-old boy, Luca. As their relationship ensues, she faces problems telling him about her diabetes and later, her age. This is revealed after a fateful trip to a New York City club, in which a bouncer does not allow her into a club because she is underage. Luca is outraged, unable to believe that Stacey is "only thirteen". Meanwhile, Dawn must face her neighbor, the fiery Mrs. Haberman, who is increasingly upset because of the camp activities that are taking place next door. Also, Mallory is in the process of writing her first novel while Jessi continues to dance her way through life and closer to her dream of becoming a professional dancer.

At the end of the movie, it is Kristy's thirteenth birthday and she has arranged to go to an amusement park with her father. Promising her friends she would make it to her own party, Kristy is left abandoned in the rain at the park by her father. She begins to walk home until her friends show up in Luca's car after Mary Anne's confession about the return of Kristy's real dad. Luca drives the girls back to Mallory's parents' cabin and present Kristy with a half-melted birthday cake. As Stacey is saying good-bye to Luca, he tells her that he will be coming to Stoneybrook again next year. "I'll be fourteen," Stacey tells him gleefully. They share a kiss just before Luca departs. Amusingly, this would never actually happen, as the age of the girls in the books would permanently remain thirteen for the remainder of the literary series. At the end of the movie, the girls, in return for making her summer so miserable with their summer camp, give the greenhouse to Mrs. Haberman. Meanwhile, Kristy witnesses a miracle when her buddy Jackie Radowsky hits his first home run, nailing Cokie, who is sitting in a tree nearby, in the process.

[edit] MPAA rating

PG- for some mild language.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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