Tuesday, February 21, 2012

# 93

93: National Velvet (1944)

Mickey Rooney (Mi Taylor), Elizabeth Taylor (Velvet Brown), Donald Crisp (Mr. Brown), Ann Revere (Mrs. Brown), Angela Lansbury (Edwina Brown), Jackie Jenkins (Donald Brown)

Velvet Brown is a young school girl obsessed with horses. Just outside her town she meets a wanderer: Mi Taylor. Mi has travelled to Velvet’s town looking for Velvet’s mother—her name was in a notebook Mi inherited from his father. As Mi and Velvet are talking, a gorgeous wild steed gallops across the pasture and Velvet is smitten. She calls the horse Pie and the Pie is all she can talk about. That night Mi stays for dinner and Mrs. Brown decides to hire Mi to help around the farm. Velvet likes Mi and is happy that he’s going to stay with them. When the owner of the Pie decides that he can’t control the horse and wants to be rid of him—Pie is raffled off at Mr. Brown’s butcher shop. Mi purchases raffle tickets for all the Brown children and Velvet wins her coveted steed! Mi is impressed with Pie’s natural jumping ability—and we learn that Mi was once a jockey himself. Mi once raced in England’s Grand National Steeplechase but for some reason (revealed later in the film) he quit jockeying. Mi thinks that if properly trained the Pie could be a contender in the Grand National—and Velvet seizes on the idea. She writes to the race officials on her own and asks Mi to help her train the Pie. Mi is reluctant but then agrees to help Velvet train Pie to race in the Grand National.

I am as enchanted by this film today as I was when I first saw it as a young girl Velvet’s age. The plot is simple but the performances and characters in this film are superb. Elizabeth Taylor in her first starring role is delightful. Mickey Rooney gives a wonderful performance as a wanderer who at first thinks he will just rob the Browns and leave—but is truly touched by the kindness of the Brown family. Ann Revere (Mrs. Brown) earned an Oscar for her performance as Velvet’s mom—one of the strongest female characters I have seen in a film. Angela Lansbury is charming as a young teenage girl in love, and Jackie Jenkins as Donald Brown is a true gem. The climatic race scene is extremely well shot and is as fresh and exciting today as I imagine it was when the film debuted. This film is almost 70 years old but it isn’t dated. The dialogue is fresh, the characters are modern, and the performances are all top notch—there’s even a cute family dog. While you may find this film filed under “Kid’s” or “Family Fun” at the Family Video—no matter what your age this film is a delight and by the end of it you will be cheering for Velvet and the Pie!

If you like this film I also recommend the following films which do not appear in the Lisa’s Top 100:

The Secret Garden (1993)
The Muppets (2011)

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