The Black Stallion (1979)
Facts
| Directed by | Carroll Ballard |
| Cast | Kelly Reno, Mickey Rooney, Teri Garr, Clarence Muse, Hoyt Axton, Michael Higgins, John Karlsen and Leopoldo Trieste |
| Theatrical Release | October 17, 1979 |
| DVD Release | September 10, 1997 |
| Running Time | 118 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | G (General Audience) |
| UPC Code | 027616626998 |
| Buy this item | $10.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 2 5:24 EST (details) 1 DVD, ROONEY,MICKEY, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Letterboxed, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0), French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 1.0), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed - Dolby Digital 1.0) Or 73 new from $5.46, 37 used from $3.12 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| THIS KNOCKS YOUR HOOVES OFF! |
The young Alec Ramsay is sailing with his father on a boat when it crashes and the only survivors are he and a magnificent black stallion. Stranded and alone, Alec slowly gains the stalion's trust until a close bond of love passes between them. Suddenly rescused and jolted back into life, Alec takes his black stallion home but the horse escapes, found by the old and grizzled Henry Dailey. Alec and Henry see a great racing horse in the stallion and Alec wants to race him. So they train for months until there is a match held between the two fastest horses on the planet- and The Black, Alec, and Henry all enter the race to prove that The Black is faster than all of them!
Incredible, beautiful, and awesome! Buy this DVD and enjoy the masterpiece!
Have fun,
Moonwhisker April 15, 2008
| Wonderful family film |
| Disappointed... |
| 'if you can ride that horse, you can have that horse' |
The son is a 10 year old boy who will go on to tame a wild horse after both become castaways on a deserted island.
Though with very little dialogue, the first 45 minutes of this film are simply awesome; they set a precedent which is very hard to follow. In short: the son lives up to his father's advice while on the island, with the ultimate result of saving the life both of himself and of the horse; along the way, giving his all, the boy also realizes a union with nature which can perhaps and might best be described as creation--or at least the horse--becoming the boy's surrogate father. The boy and the horse do become deep friends. The methods the boy adopts to tame and ride the horse are gentle, ingenious, beautiful, and frankly, believable. Upon his rescue and return to civilization, the boy soon realizes that this "ownership" he attained of the horse while on the island is called into question--as are his somewhat asocial coping skills he developed while living on the island. The boy thus shifts his attention to finding the place of the horse in the world and thus his own place at the same time. This takes the form of training the horse as a racehorse, and himself as a jockey--with the help of a new found friend.
The transition from the island to civilization is a bit jolting to the audience; at moments it even feels like a different film; but it is done with suitable humor, and merely replicates in the audience the same experience as the boy.
In the end, the boy succeeds in being "alone" with his horse while being "in civilization" at the same time. The film comes full circle; the closing credits have some of the most beautiful scenes in the movie.
A very inspiring, very moving and very beautiful film. A must see for anyone who likes horses, nature--or even people; about as close to a religious experience you can expect from a movie...at least for a movie that is not religious... March 11, 2008
| Not as good as I remembered...... |
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