CONTINUED
7. "Phar
Lap" (1983)
Over in Australia, in the late '20s and early '30s, a horse once
described as "a cross between a sheepdog and a kangaroo" becomes a
racing phenom, a "red terror" that wins so effortlessly that the
powers-that-be take to handicapping him with heavy weights. Like
Seabiscuit, Phar Lap (Thai for "lightning") wasn't born a winner;
his money-hungry trainer rides "laziness" -- and nearly the life --
out of the colt, uphill on sand dunes. Then a stablehand ("The Man from Snowy River"'s Tom Burlinson) who loves
the horse taps into Phar Lap's unstoppable competitive streak by
holding him back, behind other horses, then letting him run. The
magnificent red horse gallops away with every race -- beautifully
photographed, often in slo-mo -- even when injured and carrying
extra weight. "Phar Lap" is a heartbreaker, contrasting the
great heart of a noble beast who would run to win "even if his legs
were cut off" with the unworthy wheeling and dealing of the greedy
men who own and race horses: "If something's good, that's O.K. But
if something's too good, that upsets the entire system."
6. "National
Velvet" (1944)
If you've never seen this showcase for 12-year-old Elizabeth Taylor (her
fifth film), give yourself a treat and take a gander at the
violet-eyed child who truly "lights up" the screen with her
oversized passion for horses. Along with the handsome English
countryside -- all saturated color, quaint village, stone fences and
ocean-side green fields that Velvet gallops over -- there's a
supporting cast to die for: Anne Revere, as Velvet's
wise, sweetly feminist mother (Oscar, Best Supporting Actress); Donald Crisp as her often
befuddled dad; Mickey Rooney as a bad
boy surreptitiously reformed by Mrs. Brown, Velvet and a horse named
Pie. Watch Taylor cantering on her back in bed, "reins" attached to
her feet, crying "Faster! Faster!" and listen to her ardent "I'm in
love with him! This is the real thing!" -- and there's no doubt that
director Clarence Brown fully
grasped the erotic bond between adolescent girls and horses. Taylor
plays Velvet full-throttle, her hunger for Pie a harbinger of
hormonal excesses to come in "A Place in the Sun," when the
18-year-old turns those incredible eyes on Montgomery Clift.
5. "The Silver
Brumby" (1993)
Adapted from a novel Elyne Mitchell wrote for her teenaged
daughter's pleasure, "The Silver Brumby" is a spectacularly
beautiful visual poem, full of gorgeous weather, landscapes and
horses, courtesy of the High Country in Victoria, Australia. In the
1950s, a single mother teaches her daughter natural lore, spinning a
tale about the life of a legendary silver brumby (wild horse) to
wile away stormy evenings. Growing from creamy little foal bouncing
about its palomino mother like an equine jack-in-the-box to
magnificent stallion, the brumby is relentlessly pursued by The Man
(a very young Russell Crowe, just a few
years after his breakout roles in "Proof" and "Romper Stomper"). But it's in the
undisturbed world of the wild brumbies that the film delivers some
of its most exhilarating images: against a backdrop of
black-and-white winter woods, a hulking pewter-gray stallion rears
and snaps at his longtime red rival, the silver's father; an old
stallion felled on a dark night, his death signaled by the slow
disappearance of his visible breath; the silver brumby and the
golden mare The Man has used to bait him cantering side by side over
the high, rolling hills.