Invisible Child (1999)
March 8, 1999Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Currently Invisible Child is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Apple TV, Amazon Video, Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads, Google Play Movies, Fandango At Home, YouTube, Freevee
Streaming in:🇺🇸 United States
Cast & Crew.
Rita Wilson
Annie Beeman
Victor Garber
Tim Beeman
Tushka Bergen
Gillian
Mae Whitman
Rebecca 'Doc' Beeman
David Dorfman
Sam Beeman
Freda Foh Shen
Actress
Michael Winters
Actor
Terry Diab
Peg
Josh Adell
Doctor
Jodie Mann
Woman in Bathroom
Jane Edith Wilson
Mrs. Wood
Joan Micklin Silver
Director
David A.R. White
Mr. Felix
Ronald Bass
Writer
Tom Pothoff
Man in Classroom
David Douglas
Carnival Person
David Field
Writer
Gideon Amir
Producer
Robert Harvey
Officer #1
Victoria Dolceamore
Composer
Louisa Abernathy
Nurse
Cheryl Carter
Supervisor #1
Ken Kelsch
Cinematographer
Allison Harvey
Georgia Peach
Media.
Details.
Wiki.
Invisible Child is a 1999 American made-for-television drama film starring Rita Wilson as a mother who imagines she has three children when she has only two. Fearing his wife may be institutionalized because of her delusional disorder, her husband goes along with this charade as though it is perfectly normal. The 10-year-old daughter assists her father in facilitating the delusion. The youngest child seems to really believe that he has a 5-year-old sister named "Maggie." They hire a nanny who initially goes along with the family's unusual situation, but she becomes concerned about the effects on the real children and reports the family to child protective services.
A legal battle ensues, ending in victory for the family. It is also revealed that the real children were not harmed by pretending about "Maggie." In the middle of the movie, the husband explains that he tried to take his wife to the best psychologists in town, who told him that she was mentally ill and would have to go to an institution. He didn't want that to happen, so he went along with the ruse for five years.
One night, his wife hears him carrying on a conversation with "Maggie," and the next morning she states that "Maggie" has died. Apparently, hearing the aforementioned conversation helps the wife out of her mental illness and allows her to finally let go of her imaginary child.