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Title: | Movie Reviews and Discussion |
Notice: | Please do DIR/TITLE before starting a new topic on a movie! |
Moderator: | VAXCPU::michaud o.dec.com::tamara::eppes |
|
Created: | Thu Jan 28 1993 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1249 |
Total number of notes: | 16012 |
604.0. "Black Beauty" by DSSDEV::RUST () Mon Aug 08 1994 17:44
"Black Beauty" is a very pretty rendition of the classic story. [A
review in a local paper mentioned the critic's fondness for the Black
Beauty story even in its original version, when it was known as the
Book of Job. <chortle>] The story is narrated by Beauty himself, in
voice-over. Though this is faithful to the book, which is also told
from Beauty's point of view, I found it distracting in the movie; in
many scenes, the narration was superfluous, as the actions of the
horses said it all without words. However, it did come in handy for
advancing the plot, and wasn't too terribly intrusive. [One annoyance
for me, though, was that Ginger - Beauty's stablemate and most
cherished equine friend - never got to say anything. In the book, she
and Beauty had a number of interesting conversations about humans and
what they meant to horses, but in the movie we miss nearly all of that;
of all the horses we see, only Beauty has a voice.]
Much of the film consists of wonderful footage of the horses at work or
play - the loveliest featured some "dance" sequences with Black Beauty,
Ginger, and little Merrylegs the pony, all at liberty, frolicking or
racing or cavorting in their meadow. Wonderful stuff for horse
fanciers...
The days of wine and roses (or oats and clover, to be more appropriate)
don't last long, of course. Fate keeps dropping by to send Beauty to
one home after another, some good, some bad, some deplorable. How he
fares through all this makes up the rest of the tale, with only passing
nods at the people who come and go.
The human actors are all first-rate, though most have little screen
time; they have to sketch their parts, interact with the horses, and
then disappear as Beauty moves on. (There's some nice casting here - the
boy who played Dickon in "The Secret Garden" shows up as young Joe, the
well-meaning stableboy, and there's a lovely turn as a good-hearted
cabbie by David Thewlis, whose previous credits include a role as a
thoroughly despicable abuser of young boys in "Prime Suspect III", and
a sociopath in "Naked".)
Considered as a "family movie," this is probably too slow for very
young children, unless they'd be content just looking at the horses;
and some of the scenes of cruelty and privation are a little rough to
watch for anyone who's got a soft spot for horses. [As it is, the
movie's been toned down quite a bit from the book. Some of the scenes I
recall as the most painful to read have been excised or rewritten.
However, there are scenes of mistreatment, of injury, and of death -
and of course the ongoing theme of abandonment, where even the best and
most loving owners find themselves forced to leave their animals
behind.]
It's sweet, and sad, and beautiful - and sometimes a bit silly, but
that's OK. I recommend it.
-b
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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604.1 | CACK | 44247::DWALLACE | Heid fu'o' slammin' doors | Sun Sep 25 1994 04:45 | 1 |
| BLACK BEAUTY IS A LOAD OF PURE CACK.
|
604.2 | You said a mouthful there Dave.... | PAKORA::DMILLER | Hello...it's me. | Fri Sep 30 1994 00:30 | 4 |
|
Which works wonders on the garden, by the way.
Eloquently put, as ever, Mr Wallace.
|
604.3 | | FUTURS::CROSSLEY | For internal use only | Tue Oct 04 1994 12:50 | 4 |
|
I doubt Black Beauty could even have made a decent glue.
Ian.
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