Movies: 18470   |   TV Series: 3282   |   Added today: 0   |   Storage: 65898 GB
BY GENRES
BY YEAR
BY LETTER

Buy The Ultimate Gift Movie. Watch online or Download

The Ultimate Gift

Genres: Dr

Starring: Drew Fuller, James Garner, Abigail Breslin, Mark Joy, Ali Hillis, Mircea Monroe, Brett Rice

Director(s): Michael O. Sajbel

Available Quality: Hi Def

Country: USA

Year: 2006

Available Quality: DivX, Hi Def, iPod, Hi Def

IMDB Rating: 7.3 out of 10 (7061 votes)

After the death of the oil tycoon Howard Red Stevens, his greedy family is gathered in the office of his lawyer, partner and friend Mr. Theophillis Ted Hamilton and his associated Miss Hastings for the reading of the will. For his reckless and selfish grandson Jason Stevens, who hated him, Red assigns twelve apparently simple tasks called gifts - of work, money, friends, learning, problems, family, laughter, dreams, giving, gratitude, a day and love - challenging the playboy Jason to a journey of discoveries. When he meets the leukemic girl Emily and her mother Alexia, Jason changes his perspective of life and money, superseding the expectations of Red, improving and becoming a better man and receiving the ultimate gift from his wise grandfather.

The Ultimate Gift (iPod) Resolution: 480x256 px Total Size: 293 Mb
The Ultimate Gift (Hi Def) Resolution: 1920x1040 px Total Size: 8941 Mb
The Ultimate Gift (Hi Def) Resolution: 1280x696 px Total Size: 5589 Mb
The Ultimate Gift (DivX) Resolution: 624x336 px Total Size: 747 Mb

Movie Photos:

We have taken some photos of "The Ultimate Gift". They represent actual movie quality.

Visitors Review

(20 May 2012)

The Ultimate Gift


This was very cheesey and a really nice movie to watch on a Sunday afternoon while it is raining...

(20 May 2012)

At last!


This review is from: The Ultimate Gift (DVD) Refreshingly wonderful and inspirational. Bought more as gifts. Not too many movies are worth the time to watch or the money to purchase, this one is!

(20 May 2012)

Bring a hankerchief.


This movie starts out slow and turns into a classic tearjerker. Billionaire Red Stevens (James Garner) dies. He leaves his fractious family bits and pieces of his empire. But his grandson Jason (Drew Fuller) is singled out for special attentions. Through a series of videos recorded before he died with the help of his wise old lawyer (superbly played by Bill Cobb), the dead Red Stevens sends Jason off on a series of tasks in order to merit what grandpa calls "the ultimate gift". Of course, Jason hates the deceased grandfather. In fact, everyone in the family hates everyone else to one degree or another. Jason starts off as a selfish, self-centered jerk, but you just know that grandpa will change him as a man and bring to understand the grandfather he hated and shunned. It takes litte Emily (fetching played by Abigail Breslin, a real sweetheart) and her single mom Alexia (Ali Hillis) to help the real Jason ultimtely shine through. Brian Denehy plays a small role and it was nice to see him onscreen again. Jason goes through some adventures on his way to manhood, all of which are contrived, but that's just the nature of things. Overall, the film ends up being a real tearjerker in spite of its weak, forumlaic opening. Gratifying in is own way and well worth the watching when you feel like seeing an upbeat film about the potentials of humanity.Jerry

(19 May 2012)

Don't miss this one


This is a wonderful family movie with a lasting message. You cannot predict what will happen next and how it will end. The acting is excellent. I am giving this movie 5 stars and two thumbs up. It also makes a wonderful gift.

(16 May 2012)

Awesome!


This was an awesome movie. You've got to watch it. My friend let me borrow it and then I quickly went out and bought my own copy from Amazon as a gift for someone, but had to watch it again before I did send it off. I really enjoyed the special faetures also. They're definitely also very much worth the watch! The movie was more than a pleasant surprise!

(15 May 2012)

The Ultimate Gift


This is a beautiful movie. Excellent for learning about family values and values of life in general.

(11 May 2012)

Heartwarming!


This review is from: The Ultimate Gift (DVD) A great reminder that true happiness is in loving and serving others. The movie brings this out without being preachy.

(10 May 2012)

Great Family Film


This was a great family film. In an age of materialism, this movie has a timely message. Hard work and relationships are more important than money. Also teaches that giving is better than receiving.

(07 May 2012)

Nice movie but I expected a tear jerker


This is a nice feel good movie but I was expecting to cry- in the good way. It wasn't that moving though, yet I feel that if written slightly different it could have raised alot of emotions in me. Overall, a very nice story. I would recommend it as a mood lifter, a family film, or if u are the type who just loves a nice positive movie.

(06 May 2012)

Wisdom prevails


This wonderful, inspiring movie focuses on the superficial in the world and brings a young man to an understanding of what is really important in life. The twists and turns keep you guessing and the final result is beautiful! This is one movie that everyone embarking on life should see!

(28 April 2012)

The Ultimate Stumble


Beware; Ultimate Spoilers lie ahead.Someone (I won't say who) wanted me to watch this movie and give her a concise and honest review of it, but after I saw this film, I realized that my feelings about it were so strong, that I simply had to put them into words.The movie begins innocently enough; with the death of a very wealthy and powerful man named Red Stevens. His own family seems to attend his funeral as mainly a formality prior to the reading of his will; a will in which each receives nothing of much consequence; due to the fact that they would undoubtedly abuse the companies and riches that the dead man has spent his life building.The depictions of the man's family are probably meant to evoke some sort of pity, because of their clear narcissism, greed, and tendency to talk about money to the exclusion of all else. In short, these people are straw-men; stereotypes of rich, spoiled individuals with little or no depth invested in any of their personalities.Since the family members are all background characters who don't get much screen time, I probably shouldn't be too upset by that, but this is also a film about one character who does eventually develop, so there's kind of a sense that they could have given these characters a bit of depth if they'd wanted to; they just didn't, because they were trying to make a point.As if that point wasn't obvious enough, it's hammered in rather loudly by Hamilton; the seeming attorney of the dead tycoon. Hamilton derides the family members for their character flaws, even while they're sitting right in front of him, though not directly to their faces, exactly. I found myself wondering if Hamilton's comments to his secretary couldn't have taken place in the hallway, but it's a minor gripe in a film that deserves a much better effort.The one person who does receive anything of any substance is a young man named Jason Stevens; a college grad-age boy, who is so unrealistically spoiled, that he goes to a graveyard and forgets there's a funeral within the first five minutes of the film. I couldn't make that up if I tried.Rather than being given cash or fancy businesses, however, Jason is given a series of missions to perform; missions which involve doing things like manual labor, having all of his stuff stolen, and making friends, and here is the part where the film is truly at it's best. Between the eight minute mark, clear through to the end of the first half hour of the film, Jason learns all sorts of things that are worth learning, such as the value of work, the value of doing a job well, and who his friends really are, or to be more precise, who they aren't.Without money or a place to live, Jason quickly learns that he has no real friends. Even his family isn't allowed to help him by order of Hamilton, but he has to make a friend somehow, and here is the first major issue that the movie stumbles into, at the thirty-three minute mark, almost on the dot. That's when Jason runs into his "friend," a young girl who, we later find out, has a terrible illness, which I insist must be sunlight poisoning, because she is clearly some kind of vampire.The little girl's name is Emily, and not only does she dress constantly in black, wear black lipstick, and carry an umbrella when there's no rain, but from her speech, mannerisms and the way she thinks, it's obvious that she is at least sixty. She's like Fred Savage, except less sympathetic.I absolutely refuse, however, to pin any of the blame for this character's enormously-grating personality on Abigail Breslan. She did a good job depicting the character that she was given. No, the fault lies with the character herself; with Emily. Where there could have been the believable character of a sick, pitiable child, we instead get an aged philosopher, who flawlessly predicts people's actions for the benefit of her conniving schemes; schemes such as teaching Jason the true meaning of friendship, and hooking him up with her mother. There is no time in this movie where she doesn't come across as a smaller, paler version of Guinan from Star Trek, and it's entirely the fault of whoever wrote her dialogue and role in the story. Hands down, I would say that this is the worst thing about this movie; worth a whole star down by itself, because of its prominence in the movie from this point on. The movie has other problems, but none that keep coming back again and again, like... Well, like a terminal disease, if you'll forgive that.So anyway, Jason succeeds in making friends with the wise Miyagi nosferatu, or at least, he pretends to at first. Later, he really does make friends with her, visiting her in the hospital, and helping her out as best he can, which isn't easy, since he has very little money, and she never seems to shoot him so much as a hopeful smile. Vampires can't be good to others, you know.Upon receiving his most recent instructions, and returning to the hospital, Jason finds Master Yoda's room empty, except for a very, very cruel nurse, who tells him that she's "with the lord now." In the next scene, he enters a chapel and there she is. Oh! Ha ha ha! I get it. I'll bet she pulls that trick every week with somebody; fools them into thinking their friends and relatives are dead, then it really turns out she was kidding. Ha ha HA! Seriously, though; this nurse should be fired.In the chapel (yes, vampires can walk on holy ground. In fact, they need to sleep in it,) Jason and Obi-Wan discuss why she's so darn messed up in the head. Apparently, having a terminal disease makes you age fifty years, although they do skip over the part about her being undead. Presumably, some secrets are just too personal.In the very next scene, Jason meets with Master Splinter's mom, who seems not to have learned her daughter's wisdom, though she does make up for it by crying very unconvincingly on three separate occasions. In one scene, she's even facing away from the camera, and it's still impossible to mistake her performance for real crying, because of the fact that she overplays it so darn much.Well, anyway, Jason and the mother get into a very shoehorned relationship, which didn't need to happen, and takes away from the movie at just about every stage. Nothing about her presence in this part of the movie is necessary or pleasant, as she more or less sits uncomfortably at the dinner table of Jason's family on thanksgiving, doing and saying next to nothing of any substance. Once again, Jason's family get to revel in their nature as stereotypes before Jason is sent on his next mission; go to a third world country for some charity work in a library.While Jason is in that third world country, he convinces a guide to help him find information about what happened to his father, though the guide is reluctant, because doing so involves going into "drug lord territory." Sure enough, they haven't been there for five minutes, when they're assaulted by drug lords, who, just like real drug lords, are a small gang of guys in the middle of a jungle, with basic guns, who all dress like Indiana Jones, and don't seem to have any house, village, or anything to live in. Sure.Anyway, the budget drug lords keep Jason and the guide prisoner, make fun of them on Christmas just to be jerks, then threaten to kill them the next day, because, presumably, a dead hostage is far more valuable than a living one. Fortunately, though, they fail, and Jason and the guide escape, thanks to a conveniently-unlocked door. They then decide that with miles and miles of jungle all around them, their best chance of escaping from people with guns is to run through an open fiend, with no cover more significant than two-foot-high grass.Of course, in order to justify his trip to a third world country, and as such, the whole dead father subplot, Jason must bring back something from his travels, and sure enough... It's a doll for Master Genkai. How sweet. That's one neck she can afford to bite.Of course, because we definitely haven't had enough of the lame relationship subplot, Jason must take Rafiki and her mother to a ranch that he worked on earlier in the movie, for a romantic interlude having nothing whatsoever to do with the main redemption plot. However, while he's there, he's challenged by the videos of his dead grandfather to find a dream to fulfill with his life. Jason then receives a sum of one hundred million, and decides to use it as the first third of the money needed for building a home in honor of his friend; Shifu. A home which will, he says, take care of "a dozen or more families."Now, I admit that I have never built a home to care for a dozen or more families, and the economy is very bad right now, and likely to get worse, but it seems to me that three hundred million is enough to take very good care of over fifty to a hundred families for the rest of their lives, even once you factor in the construction costs. Blowing all that cash on a few dozen people made less sense, to me, than most of the things going on here. I mean, couldn't he just found a new hospital or something? Some of the big ones admit loads and loads of patients at a time. I know things are bad for medicine now that the government's devouring the medical profession, but Jason's plan hardly seems cost effective to me.Anyway, cost effective or not, it seems to win over Hamilton, who gives Jason the rest of his grandfather's money; a large, large sum. He becomes rich and powerful, and decides to do right by the people of the world, and is free to (presumably) marry the mother of his young friend. The only problem is that Gandalf dies of her terminal illness, though I'm sure she'll come back at the turn of the tide, or the next time full moonlight hits her remains.I want to go on record right here, however, as saying that I found this movie only half bad, but in a way, that's why it hurt so much to watch it. It's obvious that this film was built around the skeleton of a story that was very solid. It's just that for whatever reason, that skeleton had rotten bits all over it, and was generally picked clean.I like the movie's message, the plot and the fact that Jason really does get a lot of money at the end (teaching us all that sometimes, what we need really is what we want, just not for the same reasons,) but there was just too much garbage piled onto this story by whoever assembled, wrote and/or directed it. Too many unnecessary movie elements were inserted where they weren't needed. The unnaturally-wise nature of Emily, the romance with the mother, and the whole dead father subplot spring to my mind as being things that could easily have been cut from the movie, and replaced with something more substantial, like some more scenes of Jason learning lessons or something. I also have no problem with the religious and spiritual elements of the film, though like everything else, it could have used another spoonful of subtlety.In the end, this is a bad movie, but it feels like the kind of bad movie that was based on something good. Apparently, it's actually based on a book, in fact. I haven't read the book myself, but I know someone who has, and she really enjoyed it, so why not read that instead of watching this? The Ultimate Gift is one awesome concept after another, stumbled over clumsily, as though in the desire to appeal to a demographic, rather than to be a quality film, and that kind of approach never, ever, ever ends well.

(28 April 2012)

Best movie I've ever seen


This review is from: The Ultimate Gift (DVD) I was stunned by this picture. The whole family can watch it without worrying about content and the beneficial impact is enormous. I recommend it!

(21 April 2012)

The Ultimate Gift


This review is from: The Ultimate Gift (DVD) This was an excellent movie. The movie had a very good story and it also had a meaning that we all could learn from.

(20 April 2012)

The Ultimate Gift Movie


This review is from: The Ultimate Gift (DVD) I enjoyed the movie, but as always, it is not as good as the book. The movie is a great movie for families to watch, because it, like the book, teaches life lessons. The movie does not contain any foul language which is so nice to see.

(17 April 2012)

A Keeper!


I loved this movie! "The Ultimate Gift" is a great feel-good movie to be enjoyed by the whole family. You want this movie in your collection and on your gift-giving list!

(16 April 2012)

The ultimate gift


I really enjoyed this movie. It gets you to look past yourself and try to think of others the way God wants us to be.

(16 April 2012)

warm & fuzzy


This is one of those movies that leave you with something positive, and with a warm, fuzzy feeling after watching it. James Garner is doing more of this type of movie. Other movies of his you might also enjoy are "The Notebook" and "Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood".

(15 April 2012)

A great family movie


This review is from: The Ultimate Gift (DVD) i saw part of this movie on the Hallmark Channel here in Qatar. it looked good so i bought it for my wife. we watched it together & both of us thought it was an awesome movie with a message. i'm not a chick flick kinda guy but this movie was a tear jerker. Abigail Breslin deserves two thumbs up & James garner was his usual self... superb!! i rate his performance right there with the notebook. just a great movie.

(14 April 2012)

MEMORABLE


This review is from: The Ultimate Gift (DVD) This movie had some surprises and sadness. Brings out a lot of emotions.This man learned a lot about life and love. WELL DONE...EXCELLENT.. CHARACTER BUILDING...LIFE CHANGING. I BOUGHT THE MOVIE.

(14 April 2012)

Usual Hollywood Faith-Based Fare


Being that this movie is being sold through most, if not all Christian outlets, I feel compelled to distinguish this from others for the sake of Christians who are truly looking for deeply spiritual family viewing.This is not it.Mentioning Jesus Christ favorably, showing a statue of Him occasionally, and mentioning a few lines here and there about life hereafter does not pass muster...sorry.If you are looking for movie similar to a Rich Christiano and Alex Kendrick production, this is not it.Sadly, I was hoping for more. The plot was intriguing and entertaining, but there was something lacking...Perhaps I should have taken note of James Garner's involvement; I have always considered him a great actor, but never appreciated his trash talk. Yes, there are the "obligatory" curse words in this movie, for those who care. Then there is the rude-turned-cute little girl (played by Abigail Breslin), depicting the child-turned-parent roles so prevalent in movies. What happened to children being children, and adults accepting their rightful responsibility? Despite the sadness of this little girl's illness, her behavior is not suitable as a role model for my daughter.There is an increased focus of faith-based productions coming out of Hollywood, chasing the family market that's craving decent material. This is one of their products. For some peculiar reason, I just don't think that they have a clue.

Review total: 20, showing from 1 to 20

© 2009-2012 QubMovies All rights reserved