Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds | Rotten Tomatoes
Rotten Tomatoes

Movies / TV

    Celebrity

      No Results Found

      View All
      Movies Tv shows Shop News Showtimes

      Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds

      2016 1 hr. 35 min. Documentary List
      100% 57 Reviews Tomatometer 86% 500+ Ratings Audience Score A portrait of Hollywood royalty Carrie Fisher and her mother, Debbie Reynolds. Read More Read Less Watch on Fandango at Home Premiered Jul 18 Buy Now

      Where to Watch

      Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds

      Fandango at Home Prime Video Max Apple TV

      Watch Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds with a subscription on Max, rent on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV, or buy on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV.

      Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds

      What to Know

      Critics Consensus

      Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds is a touching, bittersweet, and ultimately charming love story that serves as a poignantly effective tribute to the strangely complicated, uniquely resilient mother/daughter duo.

      Read Critics Reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (33) audience reviews
      Audience Member It tells the life of the late Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher. Both of them gone too soon! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Audience Member Heartbreakingly Beautiful. Fisher is at her best when the Zingers fly. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Audience Member - Bright Lights is a joy, a dance, a song. - Confession time - I haven't seen the original Star Wars. Sure I know the basic plot line and a few quotes and I'm pretty sure I could fake interest in it if I need to. But yeah, I'm not such a big Wookie, Princess Leia, Hans Solo sort of fan. So to me, Carrie Fisher was not Princess Leia. I knew her as the writer of Wishful Drinking, The Best Awful and my personal favorite, Postcards from the Edge. She wrote brutally honest, hilarious memoirs about her drug-addiction, being bipolar and living with her superstar mom, Debbie Reynolds. I was fascinated to discover that she was also an uncredited Hollywood script doctor for many years. She mainly edited scripts and wrote dialogue for women-protagonists. Star Wars, Sister Act, Hook, The River Wild, So I Married an Axe Murderer, These Old Broads - she doctored them all. So, when news of her death popped up on my Twitter feed, I grieved for someone whom I had never met but had always admired. The next day I found myself grieving again, this time for Carrie Fisher's mom, Debbie Reynolds. I knew a lot about Debbie as an actress and I was aware that her personal scandal was one of the biggest Hollywood had ever seen. Her husband, Eddie Fisher left Debbie for her good friend Elizabeth Taylor. She was devastated but she kept going. She raised her children and married another couple of assholes. But each and every time she was down, she got back up. I thought that made her pretty inspiring. A couple days after their death, it was announced that a documentary starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds would be pushed forward for release. Bright Lights follows their lives in what would be unknown to them, as the last year of their lives. Bright Lights opens with Carrie Fisher walking down the front path of her house with a tray of food. It is for her mother who lives right next door. This struck me as so lovely because I knew that they had had a turbulent relationship in the past. The film doesn't touch on their bumpy history much. I was aware of it after seeing an interview with the pair on Oprah in 2011. It was revealed that Debbie and Carrie didn't talk for almost a decade. In this candid documentary, they simply love and adore each other. Carrie takes on the role of the parent as her movie star mom slowly gives into age. But it's clear that it's hard for Debbie to give up her protective ways, even when her daughter is nearing 60. Debbie's continuous worry is particularly evident in a scene where she reminisces about her daughter's battle with bipolar. Her voice breaks as she says "it takes all of us to assure her that she is loved." I found that so telling and sad. It must be so hard to convince someone who battles with depression and self-doubt, that they are in fact so very loved. Bright Lights beautifully delves into their past - from Debbie's hit Singing in the Rain to Carrie's break out role in Star Wars. But the core narrative of the film is centered on Debbie's show in Vegas while preparing to receive her Lifetime Achievement Award from the Screen Actors Guild. In one poignant yet ordinary scene, Carrie rings Debbie from her car. She's just spoken to the producers of the SAG Awards. Debbie is very ill leading up to the event and Debbie and Carrie have a conversation about her failing health. Carrie begins to cry. It broke my heart. It made me think, "they are just like the rest of us." Everyone worries about their parents or children and it's so gut-wrenching when they are in pain. It doesn't matter if you are the most famous people in Hollywood - illness and aging don't discriminate. Life's cruelties happen to us all. After watching Bright Lights, I now understand how Debbie died one day after her daughter. It seemed impossible for one to live without the other. No parent should watch their child die, and for Debbie Reynolds, the heartache was too much. If you're like me, an emotional nightmare with legs, then maybe you were upset with the passing of these two Hollywood legends. If you were, did someone say to you, "God, you didn't even know them, why are you so upset?" Well, Carrie and Debbie touched me. Actors stir something special. We bring them into our living rooms every night. We pay our hard-earned money to live their character's story on the big screen. We identify with them. They feel familiar. Of course we are upset when they die. The point is, we mourn their spirit and we mourn their art and we are allowed to. Carrie Fisher has an answer to our pain - "take your broken heart, make it into art". I did some writing today. I feel better already. ---------- This review was first published on Narrative Muse, http://narrativemuse.co/movies/bright-lights, and was written by Jules Raynes. Narrative Muse curates the best books and movies by and about women and non-binary folk on our website http://narrativemuse.co and our social media channels. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Audience Member "Age is hard for everyone, but she falls from a greater height." These two Hollywood heavyweights are such likable subjects, and their unique relationship is impossible not to admire. It's an interesting look at how big-time show business interacts with a family caught in the eye of it. And, of course, it's even more powerful knowing this mother and daughter died within days of each other, and only weeks before this movie's release. A nice little film artifact for anyone still enamored by movie stars. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/24/23 Full Review Audience Member A beautiful tribute to Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds who were undoubtedly two of the most talented stars in Hollywood. As always Carrie is eccentric, wise, funny and whipsmart with some particularly memorable moments. If you're a Carrie Fisher or Debbie Reynolds fan and miss them, this helps. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/15/23 Full Review Audience Member I highly recommend this!! Wow I am just in love with these two. I really believe they were each other's other halves. They were legends, but also just a regular mom and daughter. It's hilarious to watch their dynamic, and so sweet too. I'm sure they're chattin away on the other side right now. I ❤️ Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds forever!! 😍 Rated 5 out of 5 stars 11/19/17 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      This movie is featured in the following articles.

      Critics Reviews

      View All (57) Critics Reviews
      Margaret Lyons New York Times Ms. Fisher is brainy and salty and hilarious, and she's frank and eloquent in describing being bipolar. Dec 28, 2017 Full Review Robert Bianco USA Today This is the film we have - one that is likely to leave those who loved Reynolds or Fisher loving them even more. Dec 28, 2017 Full Review Alison Herman The Ringer Bright Lights is a heartbreaking tribute to a singular mother-daughter relationship. Aug 11, 2017 Full Review Daisy Wyatt iNews.co.uk Beneath the glitz and glamour, Bright Lights told a story of family wounds that run deep - a tale we mere mortals can relate to as well. Jan 25, 2019 Full Review Anne Brodie What She Said So many surprises and revelations, this intimate visit in their homes and heads is pure genius and a wonderful tribute to these ladies who clearly were the loves of each other's lives. Aug 24, 2018 Full Review Bobby Finger The Muse/Jezebel A gentle, minor tribute to one of Hollywood's greatest loves that proves how lucky we were to have them, and how much luckier they were to have each other. Jun 13, 2018 Full Review Read all reviews

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A portrait of Hollywood royalty Carrie Fisher and her mother, Debbie Reynolds.
      Director
      Alexis Bloom, Fisher Stevens
      Executive Producer
      Sheila Nevins, Brett Ratner
      Production Co
      HBO Documentary Films
      Genre
      Documentary
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Feb 3, 2017
      Most Popular at Home Now