Dreamer
Dreamer
is simple, moving and arrives in the winner's circle.Official Dreamer Site
Family Drama
Starring Kurt Russell, Dakota Fanning, Elizabeth Shue, Kris Kristofferson
Rated PG (for brief language)
Running Time: 102 Minutes
Released:October 28th, 2005
4 Out Of 5 Bites
In Dreamer, you get the familiar "girl-and-her-horse" set up. In the face of insurmountable and conflicting odds both from within and without, a girl, and subsequently those she loves (who also tow an even greater line of despair.....failing marriage, foreclosure, loss of income, menial servitude, loss of manlihood, strained paternal relationships to name a few) find a way to live again. And not just live, but thrive in each others' presence once more, all because of a girl's love for a horse.
Inherent in this movie is any child's desire to latch onto something....anything.....that will bring together a fracturing family and rescue it from doom. This will definitely strike a consonant chord with the over half of this present generation's having emerged from some experience with divorce in their families. And for those in this generation unfamiliar with 1944's National Velvet and 1979's Black Stallion, Dreamer will accomplish much the same in portraying the allure of the horse to young girls and boys.
In any case, it isn't hard to become endeared to Cale (Dakota Fanning) and her efforts to realize the dream she has for an injured race horse named Sonador. The young filly is taken in by her recently fired father, Ben, (Kurt Russell) and his contingency of Mexican hired hands, a trainer, Balon, and exercise jockey, Manolin (Luis Guzman and Fredddy Rodriguez, respectively). Ben, in a heated fit of pent-up frustration at the greedy hands of his boss (David Morse), counters his will to destroy the horse, especially with his daughter present in the stall just after the horse goes down on the track. In the consequential light of Ben's boss ingnoring his warnings prior to the race that the filly's leg was not well is where the lives of both Ben and the Sonador are illumined and hang in the balance. Ben cashes in and reaps unemployment, a broken horse and much uncertainty.
Bringing the horse to the family farm offers Ben a chance at not only a possible and improbable income in rejuvenating a downed race horse, but also rekindling a faltering relationship with his father, "Pop" (Kris Kristofferson). Through his grit and wisdom for the horse (as well as some timely generosity) comes a basis for hope that will flow through Ben and subsequently, Cale, who doesn't really know yet how not to hope. There are the classical ups-and-downs with the recovery and challenges to the "dream" and newer goals to attain as they present themselves. Additionally, Ben discovers his wife (Elizabeth Shue) again, who sometimes seems like an afterthought given the activity around her.
For Cale, consciously or not, her drive to revive this horse may be seen as a child's effort to revive what she fears she's losing in her family. In the familiar, idyllic and simple setting of central Kentucky and Louisiana, there is a sweetness exuding from the film over-and-against the patented story-line. Fanning excelled again, acting like and through the child that she is without being overcome by the determination asked of her by her character. You hope that Ben's frenetic and distant shell of a man cracks enough to let his daughter in. You, of course, pull for the horse, maybe an unwitting, pivotal player in the drama....but maybe there is something more mysterious to her. The bad guy deserves his just rewards and you just want the family to get a break. Dreamer does not fail to disappoint in this, and manages to do so minus the sap and muggish sentimentality prone to the subject matter. Dreamer is simple, moving and arrives in the winner's circle.
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