Million Dollar Babies (TV Mini Series 1994) Poster

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7/10
Tragic tale about the exploitation of children by government and big business
phbalanced11 July 2006
This is an extremely sad movie from beginning to end. It's heartbreaking to see a poor Depression era family raise five children on the farm and then add another five all at once to their roster. Initially, it's a blessing when the family doctor takes over the Dionne quintuplets to ease the burden of looking after the underdeveloped babies with very little medical equipment and staff. But the doctor goes overboard when worldwide attention is given to the infant girls, and this translates into advertising endorsements for which he is handsomely rewarded but the earnings are not shared with either the parents or the quintuplets. Instead, the girls are put on display for the next five years, raising the doctor's profile and career to new highs.

Great performances by real-life couple Roy Dupuis and Celine Bonnier as the parents and also Beau Bridges as the unscrupulous doctor. The official DVD offers some commentary by the surviving quintuplets. Presented in two parts as a three hour mini series, it's lengthy and could have been shortened to a two hour movie. But it's a shocking story and is of interest not only to Canadians but perhaps to anyone who may have some ideas about placing their children into the business of entertainment. Yeah, the money may be good, but being part of the industry at such a young age may also be viewed as being part of a freak show.
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8/10
Five stars (as in quints) Actually eight...
rps-24 September 2019
We stumbled onto this masterpiece while surfing You Tube. It is a tremendously well done film. I'm surprised that it has not been revived anywhere on television or even in theatres. It dates from 1994,an era before the CBC degenerated into Dragon's Den and Schitts' Creek. Why has CBC not revived it? It's effectively shot on location. There is an awesome parade of vintage cars and trucks. I recognized a lot of the props and gadgets.(The quints were born a month after I was.) Unlike today's Murdoch Mysteries which has an abysmal, devil-may-care habit of using props, people and even slang from the wrong period, the producers here seem to have everything right, from neckties to stoves. Production values are high and I presume the story hews close to the facts.
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7/10
Very Well Done
yakster117 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I've been fascinated with the Dionne quintuplets ever since I read their highly sanitized story "We Were Five", supposedly "written" by them back in tne 70's. This movie does a very good job portraying the circumstances of the times and what turned into one of the biggest stories of the Great Depression. The heartbreak we encounter as the Dionne's have their children taken away does not even come close to the real story. Beau Bridges has star billing and rightly so as he is excellent as the "country doctor". He must've studied footage of the actual Dr. Dafoe himself. I had issues with the fictional character of Helena Reid but she was a composite of the media at the time. All in all if you want to know anything about the Dionne quintuplets and the fascination the world had for them for a few brief, sad years, this is the movie for you.
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A Miracle that was spoiled
theowinthrop16 July 2006
There is a scene in A NIGHT AT THE OPERA where Groucho and Chico are trying to agree to a contract. Amidst their patter about this clause and that one ("That's just the average "sanity" clause", says Groucho; "You cannot fool-a me," smiles Chico, "there ain't no "sanity" clause."). One of the other confusions in their dialog is when Groucho says that the contract has to be signed in triplicate. "You know what triplicate means?", asks Groucho. "Yeah,", says Chico,"It's those kids in Canada!" Chico's comment is based on the names of the most famous babies on Earth in 1935, the one year old Dionne Quintuplets. Born in a poor hamlet in the Province of Ontario in 1934 the Quintuplets were a rarity at that date of five living babies born to the same mother on the same day. They quickly became the subject of as much public attention as the President (FDR), Adolf Hitler, George Bernard Shaw, Clark Gable, Greta Garbo, Mahatma Gandhi, and maybe twenty other super celebrities of that date). Put another way - it was more likely that the average non-Canadian would have heard of the Dionne Quintuplets than the current Prime Minister of Canada (Richard Bradford Bennett) or the current Premier of the province of Ontario (Mitchell Hepburn).

Their story would be known in the west until about 1939 when the coming of the World War finally made their youthful travails seem trivial. But occasionally they returned to public notice. One of the girls had mental problems and died early in her adult life. Another died in the 1990s. Occasionally stories about fights concerning financial matters surfaced. But (like so much) it became part of yesterday's news. Few people cared who were not in their immediate circle.

The television film MILLION DOLLAR BABIES dealt with the economic, social, and political upheaval the birth of the babies brought about. You need to understand points to see how this could happen.

The Dionne family (Roy Dupuis and Celine Bonnier) were French and Roman Catholic. This did not set them up well outside of Quebec. Unfortunately they were living in the Province of Ontario, and the doctor who brought the girls into the world, Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe (Beau Bridges) was a bigot. He disliked Roman Catholics and French Canadians. A pretentious type, Dafoe decided that the quintuplets were such a unique miracle for that day they should have state sponsored care (under himself, of course), away from their parents. Through a series of legal tricks, Dafoe got the Dionnes to sign documents putting the babies into his care. He then interested Prime Minister Hepburn (Sean McCann) in setting up a state-of-the-art nursery and hospital for the care of these children. Hepburn was just elected to his position as the Prime Minister of Ontario as a Liberal. Although Mackenzie King was the party leader in Ottawa opposed to Prime Minister Bennett, he'd been out of power for four years. Hepburn, as head of the second largest province in population, had dreams of replacing King as Liberal leader and possible Prime Minister.The publicity involved with the babies would help immensely. He fully supported Dafoe.

The Doctor and the Prime Minister exploited the kids. There would be plenty of advertisements for baby products that got "endorsements by the Dione Quintuplets" through Dafoe. There were even a series of movies from Hollywood supposedly based on their adventures. There was huge sums of money involved, and none of it was going to the parents.

This film was the first to discuss this disgraceful story completely. Instead of concentrating on five prattling babies, or five female moppets at play or school, the story was one of greed and ambition. And few come out looking all that good. The five quintuplets do, but the adults don't.

The father is upset at the nasty anti-French/Roman Catholic methods of Dafoe, and manages to damage one public event by coaching the girls to ask about some unpleasant situation regarding French Canadian rights. But as it turns out, he is as willing to milk these kids for all he can as Hepburn and Dafoe are. Dafoe, who in time actually did show he could care for the children, managed to blow his position because (1) he got tipsy at an important conference he had to attend in New York City, and 2) the same snobbery he held for the parents and their French Canadian forbears was pointed at him being "inadequate" regarding his medical background - he was a simple country practitioner, and could not handle a hospital.

This was a good little history lesson into the dangers of sudden fame for the weakest in society, when the social order steps in. In the end (frequently) the biggest losers are those who get the sudden fame.
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10/10
great Warning: Spoilers
i used to watch this when i was little kid, i loved it. stole my mothers video tapes to tape it and then would watch it every week. it's a lovely movie and made an impact on me still to this day, i haven't quite forgotten it :) and don't think i will for a long while

my favorite part is at the end when the girls kiss their father goodnight and go to sleep.

having 10 kids seems insane, but you really feel it and believe all the characters in this movie.

i just love it

i hope you will as well
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Magnificent!!!
RosalieBustingMyBowls20 September 1999
This is a wonderful and heartfelt film! The actors are all incredible, and the whole movie is magically spellbinding! The movie is so dramatic, you can feel the anguish if Mrs. Dionne and the whole family. Me and my mom watched it and we loved it!!! A beautifully done movie!
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Sad Tale of Exploitation
hillari7 December 2001
This is a very well done movie about the Canadian quintuples who had their childhoods stolen from them, offered up as a side show attraction to the world. The film does a good job of showing how naive their parents were, and the complex doctor (great job by Bridges) who believes his "protection" of them in the girls' best interests. Of course, multiple births are practically commonplace these days. This story recreates what it must have been like for a world to experience something that had not happened before.
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