Archive for the ‘1980′s Animals’ Category

Harry and the Hendersons

Friday, December 12th, 2008
Movies Online

Harry and the Hendersons, a 1987 American film directed and produced by William Dear, and starring John Lithgow, Melinda Dillon, Lainie Kazan and Don Ameche, is the tragi-comic story of a family’s encounter with the cryptozoological creature Bigfoot. The film won an Academy Award for Makeup, and inspired a follow-up TV series, also called Harry and the Hendersons.

The film was released as Bigfoot and the Hendersons in the United Kingdom, though the TV series retained the American title.

Bruce Broughton composed the music throughout the entire film, and Joe Cocker & Jennifer Warnes performs Love Lives On during the end credits.

Plot

On their way home to Seattle from a camping trip, the Hendersons accidentally run over a strange and unknown creature. Unsure what else to do, they strap it to the roof of their car and take it home. Once there, the revived creature goes wild, rampaging throughout the house. Eventually, the family realizes that the creature is the legendary Bigfoot, and is actually very gentle. Given the name “Harry”, the creature’s curiosity leads him to escape, running through the city as sightings of him strike fear into the populace (and greed into the heart of one French Canadian). Trying to hide Harry from the Seattle authorities and the hunter who wants his hide, the Hendersons come to realize that the best thing for Harry is to return him to his home in the wilderness.

Benji the Hunted

Friday, December 12th, 2008
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Benji the Hunted is a 1987 children’s film about a dog trying to survive in the wilderness. It was released by Walt Disney Pictures.

Plot

Benji has become stranded in a remote island during a boating accident. He finds himself struggling to survive, avoiding close encounters with a wolf, a bear, and a territorial female cougar with her kitten.

After becoming stranded, Benji observes a female cougar gunned down by a hunter. Benji attempts to comfort the dying animal, but he is chased away by the hunter, who retrieves the dead cat and marches off with it draped over his shoulders. Benji eventually encounters four orphaned cougar kittens, presumably belonging to the murdered cougar, and he attempts to shield them from predation. A wolf pursuing the kittens, and perhaps Benji, is one of the main highlights of the film. In one of the film’s more tragic scenes, one of the kittens gets carried off by an eagle.

Benji later tries to catch up with the female cougar he encountered earlier with the intention of leaving the three remaining kittens in her care. Having accomplished this, he is then observed by his master, who flies overhead in a helecopter while searching for the lost dog.

The Legend of the White Horse

Friday, December 12th, 2008
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Legend of the White Horse (AKA Bia?y smok) is a Polish-American adventure movie for kids, released in 1986 (premiere : July 13, 1987). Produced by Alina Szpak for CBS Theatrical Films, Legend Productions & Film Polski, it is based on the magic realism novel White Horse, Dark Dragon by Robert C. Fleet, a political satire-adventure which is definitely not for kids.

Plot

The action holds in a fictional Central European country – Karistan, where beautiful Alta lives with her young blind daughter Jewel. Jewel has a friend in enigmatic white horse. Meanwhile, American Jim Martin is sent there to prove that a new investment is not going to harm the environment in Karistan…

Background

The book is described by The Science Fiction Chronicle as “an interesting juxtaposition of fantasy and modern politics,” and has become something of a cult due to its dry political humor satirizing late-era Communism and U.S. corporate boardrooms – mixed with action, historical romance and nuanced characters. The movie takes a simpler tack, perhaps reflective of Hollywood mind-think: good guys vs. bad guys. It was a decision that makes for an uneasy blend of target marketing vs. reality, since the result was a movie that at least one reviewer, Michael Medved, thought was “too intense for children.”

As Bia?y smok (White Dragon), it was the second highest grossing theatrical feature in Poland when it was released in 1987. It was renamed “Legend of the white horse” by CBS in the U.S., but the CBS Theatrical Films division was closed down in late 1986 and the feature languished in tax write-off obscurity until it was released to video by CBS/Fox Video a few years later.

The novel White Horse, Dark Dragon was held up for publication for contractual reasons, but finally published by Putnam/Berkley/Ace in 1993.

Phar Lap

Friday, December 12th, 2008
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Phar Lap (also released as “Phar Lap: Heart of a Nation“) is a 1983 film about the Australian racehorse Phar Lap. The film starred Tom Burlinson and was written by famous Australian playwright David Williamson.

Plot

Phar Lap, known affectionately as “Bobby” by his strapper Tommy Woodcock (Burlinson), collapses and dies in Woodcock’s arms, at Menlo Park in California, in 1932. The news is greeted with great sadness and anger in Australia. The remainder of the film is done as flashback.

Five years earlier, Phar Lap arrives in Australia, purchased unseen from New Zealand. His trainer Harry Telford (Vaughan) and owner Dave Davis (Leibman) watch as he’s lowered onto the wharf by sling. Davis is not impressed with the underweight, wart-ridden colt and orders Telford to sell him immediately. Telford protests, saying that the horse’s pedigree is exceptional, with Carbine on both sides of his bloodlines. Davis agrees to lease him to Telford for three years, keeping only one third of the winnings. Telford must pay for his upkeep.

As Phar Lap is brought into the stables, he and Woodcock form a strong bond. When the young strapper complains about how hard Telford works the horse, Telford sacks him. He has to reinstate Woodcock when the horse stops eating.

Phar Lap fails badly in his first few races, but Woodcock educates the horse by holding him back in trackwork, sensing that he likes to come from behind. This pays off at the AJC Derby run at Randwick, Sydney. The film shows this as Phar Lap’s first win although it was actually the RRC Maiden Juvenile Handicap in the previous racing season. The win saves Phar Lap from being sold and Telford from bankruptcy.

As the Depression bites, Phar Lap wins every race he enters. Davis attempts to capitalise on his success through shady betting schemes, something Telford wants no part of. In preparation for the Melbourne Cup, the premier race in Australia, Davis pressures Telford to scratch Phar Lap from the Caulfield Cup, to maximise Davis’s betting returns. Under great financial pressure, Telford reluctantly agrees. As Woodcock walks the horse back from track work, someone tries to shoot the horse in the street. Woodcock and Phar Lap go into hiding at a stud farm outside Melbourne, arriving at Flemington Racecourse at the very last minute for the 1930 Melbourne Cup. Phar Lap wins, ridden by champion jockey Jimmy Pike. In the 1931 Cup, the VRC imposes an unprecedented weight, “to better horse racing”. Phar Lap finishes eighth, and the racing authorities face jeering crowds. The horse is now back under Davis’s control, after the three year agreement runs out. Telford is fed up with the horse anyway, preferring to concentrate on his new stud and stables outside Melbourne. Fearing that Phar Lap will never be allowed to race under a fair weight in Australia, Davis accepts an offer to race him in Agua Caliente, Mexico, for the richest prize money ever offered in North America. Woodcock is promoted to trainer, but he soon clashes with Davis over his softer methods. An injured Phar Lap wins the race in Mexico, blood streaming from a split hoof. He dies soon after, in suspicious circumstances.

Differences from Country to Country

In the United States version of the film the story is played out in a more traditional way with the film opening with Phar Lap getting off the boat. This was done to make the ending more dramatic, since in the United States the story of Phar Lap was not well known.

Never Cry Wolf

Friday, December 12th, 2008
Movies Online

Never Cry Wolf (1983) is an American drama film adaption of Farley Mowat’s autobiography of the same name. The film, directed by Carroll Ballard, features Charles Martin Smith, Brian Dennehy, and Zachary Ittimangnaq.

The drama was made during the 1980s when Walt Disney Productions, under the guidance of Walt Disney’s son-in-law Ron W. Miller, was experimenting with more mature plot material in its films. The following year Miller would start the Touchstone Pictures label.

The premise of the film is that the Arctic’s caribou population is rapidly dwindling, and wolves are being blamed, yet no one has seen a wolf kill a caribou. The authorities send Tyler (Charles Martin Smith) – a biologist and not a survival expert – into the wilderness to study the wolves.

Plot

Starring Charles Martin Smith as a young government biologist, Tyler, who is assigned to travel to the isolated Arctic wilderness of Northern Canada to study the area’s savage population of wolves. His orders are to gather proof of the wolves‘ ongoing destruction of caribou herds.

Contact with his quarry comes quickly, ad he discovers not a den of marauding killers, but a courageous family of skillful providers and devoted protectors of their young. As Tyler learns more and more about the wolf world, he comes to fear, along with them, the onslaught of hunters (Brian Dennehy) out to kill the wolves for their pelts and exploit the wilderness. He must now make a choice – should he return to the life he once knew or should he take a stand – defending this or breathtaking new world?

Background

The film’s fundamental premise is that life in the Arctic seems to be about dying: not only are the caribou and the wolves dying, but the indigenous Inuit people as well. The animals are losing their habitat and the Inuit are losing their land and their resources while their youth are being seduced by modernity. They are trading what is real, true, and their time-honored traditions for the perceived comforts of the modern world.

Never Cry Wolf blends the documentary film style with the narrative elements of drama, resulting in a type of docudrama. It was originally written for the screen by Sam Hamm but the screenplay was altered over time and Hamm ended up sharing credit with Curtis Hanson and Richard Kletter.

The picture is also noteworthy for being the first Walt Disney film to show naked adult buttocks. The buttocks shown are those of actor Charles Martin Smith.

Smith devoted almost three years to Never Cry Wolf. Smith wrote, “I was much more closely involved in that picture than I had been in any other film. Not only acting, but writing and the whole creative process.” He also found the process difficult. “During much of the two-year shooting schedule in Canada’s Yukon and in Nome, Alaska, I was the only actor present. It was the loneliest film I’ve ever worked on,” Smith said.[4]

L. David Mech, an internationally recognized wolf expert who has researched wolves since 1958 in places such as Minnesota, Canada, Italy, Alaska, Yellowstone National Park, and on Isle Royale, criticized the work, stating that Mowat is no scientist and that in all his studies, he had never encountered a wolf pack which regularly subsisted on small prey as shown in Mowat’s book or the film adaptation.

Cujo

Friday, December 12th, 2008
Movies Online

Cujo is a 1983 horror film based on the novel of the same name by Stephen King. It was directed by Lewis Teague from a screenplay by Lauren Currier. The film was #58 on Bravo‘s 100 Scariest Movie Moments.

Plot

Donna Trenton (Dee Wallace Stone) is a frustrated suburban housewife whose life is in turmoil after her husband learns about her having an affair. Brett Camber (Billy Jayne) is a young boy whose only companion is a Saint-Bernard named “Cujo”, who in turn is bitten by a bat with rabies and becomes violent. When Donna and her young son Tad drive into the countryside and into the home where Cujo and his owners live, they didn’t realize Cujo is out there waiting for them thanks to becoming insane by the bat that bit him which makes him a cold-blooded killer. Donna and Tad attempt to survive whilst Cujo attempts to kill them, as he has killed one of his own owners.

Trivia

  • Many times, a Rottweiler was used as Cujo, because they couldn’t get a St. Bernard to look mean enough.
  • In one scene, you can see the dog’s tail tied to his rear leg. The dogs playing Cujo were very friendly dogs and the director needed them to stop wagging their tails.
  • Just before Cujo kills the police officer you can clearly see him wagging his tail.
  • Film Debut of Danny Pintauro

White Dog

Friday, December 12th, 2008
Movies Online

White Dog (1982) is a drama movie directed by Samuel Fuller, featuring Paul Winfield, Kristy McNichol, Jameson Parker and Burl Ives, that went unreleased for years because of its theme and subject: that racism is taught and learned, not innate. The film’s score was provided by Ennio Morricone.

The film is very loosely based on a 1970 semi-autobiographical work by Romain Gary, where he describes, with a great deal of literary license, the events that unfolded after he took in a stray German Shepherd dog (Gary insisted the story of the dog was completely true).

The plot of the film centers on an unmarried woman (McNichol) who takes in a stray white German Shepherd dog for her protection. What she does not know is that a white racist trained it to attack Black people on sight. Faced with either having the dog killed or retrained, she takes it to a Black dog trainer (Winfield), who undertakes the dog’s re-education as a personal challenge. Some people feared that White Dog would be a celebration of the racist attacks, and hence was very controversial.

Gary’s book was about racism in all its forms, including the racism of extremist black groups. It was depicted as a disease that can afflict anyone, regardless of race or nationality, and can even be inflicted on an innocent animal – who ultimately proves himself better than any of the people who trained him, white or black.

Fuller’s film concentrated entirely on racism against black people, while depicting only one actual white racist (the overt racial turmoil of the 60′s was long over at the time). He made the black dog trainer a far more sympathetic and admirable character than the man depicted in the book. In the film, the dog ends up as a living symbol of racism, and meets a different end than the real German Shepherd who inspired Gary’s book (who was not of a white kind). In the book, there are many examples of human racism, and the dog is simply a victim, who never seriously harms any black people in the course of the story, does not wander around attacking blacks randomly, and proves to be safe around small black children, and quite retrainable – it is the trainers who are shown as being at fault, not the dog.

Fuller invented some details about how a ‘white dog’ is trained, and also the notion that retraining the dog to stop attacking black people could make him go insane and attack white people, which was a purely cinematic flourish, with no basis in reality, or Gary’s book.

Gary’s work shows a long interest and sympathy with animals; White Dog is the only Fuller movie where an animal plays any significant role. The latter also simplified the characters in the story, the dog included, to create more potent images of racism – while not actually talking about the realities of racism, or its origins.

The Criterion Collection released an edition of White Dog in December 2008.

The Secret of NIMH

Friday, December 12th, 2008
Movies Online

The Secret of NIMH (alternatively spelled “The Secret of N.I.M.H.”) is a 1982 animated film adaptation of the Newbery Medal-winning book Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (Mrs. Frisby’s name is changed to “Brisby” in the film due to trademark concerns with Frisbee discs), written by American author Robert C. O’Brien. The title of the movie was later used for newer editions of the book. It was directed by Don Bluth, produced by Aurora Pictures, and released by United Artists.

Plot

An old rat writes in a journal about his friend Jonathan Frisby, who has been killed that day while helping with “the plan”. As he holds onto an amulet, he wonders to himself how to help Jonathan’s widow, who knows nothing of her husband’s association with this rat, or their experience of “NIMH” four years earlier. Deciding to bide his time, he puts the amulet away and says goodbye to his friend.

Elsewhere, Mrs. Brisby, a resourceful field mouse, lives in a cinder block with her children on the Fitzgibbons’ farm. She is preparing to move her family out of the field they live in as plowing time approaches; however, her son Timothy has fallen ill. She visits Mr. Ages, another mouse and old friend of her late husband, who diagnoses her son with pneumonia, and provides her with some medicine from his strange laboratory. Mr. Ages warns her that Timothy cannot go outside for at least three weeks or he will die. On her way back home she encounters Jeremy, a clumsy but compassionate crow. After she frees him from the string he was entangled in, Dragon, the farmer’s cat, appears and chases them away. Mrs. Brisby loses the medicine during the chase, but Jeremy is revealed to have picked it up. The next day spring plowing begins, and though Mrs. Brisby is able to stop the tractor, she knows she must come up with another plan. With the help of Jeremy she visits the Great Owl, a wise creature living in the nearby woods, to ask for help. He initially advises her to move her family regardless of risk, but after discovering she is Jonathan Brisby’s widow, he tells her to visit a mysterious group of rats who live beneath a rose bush on the farm and ask for Nicodemus.

Upon visiting the rose bush, Mrs. Brisby runs into Brutus, a young, muscular rat who chases her away with his electric spear. She then sees Mr. Ages entering the rose bush, and notices he has somehow broken his leg. When she tries to tell him about Brutus, he replies “Oh, never mind Brutus”. Mr. Ages then tries at first to send her away, but is amazed when she tells him about the Great Owl’s advice, because as far as he knows “No one has ever seen the Owl and lived to tell about it.” Deciding to vouch for her with the rats, Mr. Ages leads her to their home, where she is amazed to see their use of electricity and other human technology. She meets Nicodemus, the wise and mystical leader of the rats (who was the journal writer in the beginning), and Justin, an extremely kind and friendly rat who is the Captain of the Guards. She learns that her late husband, along with the rats, was a part of a series of experiments at a place known as N.I.M.H. (which stands for the National Institute of Mental Health).

Nicodemus explains to Mrs. Brisby how mice and rats were captured and tortured. Injections performed on the mice and rats had boosted their intelligence, allowing them to learn to read and to understand things such as complex mechanics and electricity. The experiments also prolonged their lifespan, which is why Jonathan never told his wife, as she would have aged and died far faster than he. The rats, along with Mr. Ages and Jonathan Brisby, escaped from N.I.M.H. and came to live on the Fitzgibbon farm. The rats created a home for themselves under Mrs. Fitzgibbon’s rose bush, creating an elaborate habitation of beautiful chambers, elevators, and Christmas lights. However, the rats are unhappy (on a number of levels) in their dependence on the humans, whom they are stealing electricity from, and have concocted “The Plan”, which is to leave the farm and live independently. Nicodemus then presents Mrs. Brisby with the amulet.

Because of her husband’s prior relationship with the rats, they agree to help Mrs. Brisby move her home out of the path of the plow. However, Jenner and his hesitant accomplice Sullivan, who wish to remain in the rose bush, plot to kill Nicodemus during the move. Mrs. Brisby is told by Justin that someone must drug the Fitzgibbon’s cat, Dragon, so that they can complete the move safely. But only mice are small enough to fit through the mousehole leading to the house, and Jonathan was killed by Dragon while trying. Mrs. Brisby volunteers as a means of repaying them.

On her way home, Mrs. Brisby sees Jeremy again. Jeremy is dazzled by her amulet and begs her to trade it to him, almost to the point of obsession, but she knows she must keep it and distracts him by asking him to fetch string for her to help move her house. Jeremy heads away to do so.

Later that night, she successfully puts the drug into the cat’s food dish, however the Fitzgibbon’s son Billy catches her and convinces his mother to let him keep her as a pet. While trapped in a birdcage, she overhears a telephone conversation between Mr. Fitzgibbon and NIMH and learns that NIMH intends to come to the farm to exterminate the rats the next day. She manages to escape from the cage and runs off to warn Justin.

Meanwhile, the rats are completing the move during a thunderstorm. Just as the Brisby house is over Nicodemus, Jenner cuts the pulley ropes, expecting the house to fall and crush Nicodemus. However, Sullivan reneges on his part of the plan, causing the house to land elsewhere. Despite this, the now unsecured equipment is destroyed by the wild weather and Nicodemus is instead crushed under flying pulleys and ropes. Everyone still assumes that it was an accident and Jenner tries to assert himself as the new leader, trying to convince them to return to the rosebush and abandon the plans to migrate. Mrs. Brisby arrives and, though saddened to hear of Nicodemus’ death and worried for her children, tries equally hard to convince the rats that NIMH is coming and that they must leave immediately. Jenner becomes angry and knocks her down, allowing him to see the amulet. Overcome by a lust for power, he draws his sword and tries to take it. Justin rushes to Mrs. Brisby’s aid, though he is initially unarmed. Jenner stabs Sullivan after Sullivan manages to give a sword to Justin. During the fight Justin accuses Jenner of killing Nicodemus and Jenner admits to it, telling Justin that Nicodemus wanted to ruin everything. Jenner appears to have the upper hand but Justin turns the tables in his favor and stabs Jenner in the stomach. Justin assumes leadership and tells everyone present that they must move tonight. Furious and seriously wounded, Jenner manages one last attack at Justin; however, shortly before dying, Sullivan manages to toss a dagger into Jenner’s back, killing him.

Mrs. Brisby suddenly hears the cries of her children from inside the house and realizes that the house is sinking in the mud it landed in. Despite the best efforts of the rats, they are unable to pull it from the mud. However, Mrs. Brisby’s will to save her children somehow gives power to the amulet, which she uses to lift the house out of the mud and move it to safety from the plow. The considerable effort causes her to pass out shortly afterward.

Some time later, Timothy has begun to recover. Jeremy comes with the string, but despairs when he sees the house is already moved. Suddenly finding “Miss Right”, an equally clumsy crow who crashes into him, he once again begs Mrs. Brisby for the amulet. She reveals the rats moved from the farm and she gave the amulet to Justin, now the leader of the rats. Jeremy is disappointed but quickly realizes it doesn’t matter and he flies off with his new love.

Reception

The film garnered critical acclaim for being one of the most vibrantly animated films of its time and has earned a 94% “fresh” approval rating on the Rotten Tomatoes website. Despite good reviews, the film only did moderately well at the box office, attributed to a combination of poor promotion, regionally-staggered release dates and competition from the Steven Spielberg blockbuster E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.[7] A major dispute between Aurora Productions, the studio which financed NIMH, and MGM/UA which had bought Aurora prior to the film’s release and added scheduling and marketing difficulties, may also have affected NIMH’s commercial success.[citation needed] There was some controversy over the perception that the film was perhaps too frightening and violent for most young children despite its MPAA “G” rating (the Walt Disney Company originally rejected this project because it was perceived to be “too dark” and complicated to be a financial hit). In addition, in one scene where Mrs. Brisby is captured, Justin cries “Damn!”, which almost caused the film to receive its original PG rating.

Nevertheless, the movie garnered a passionate cult following that arose from home video and also made quite an impact to the animation world in general. Steven Spielberg loved the film so much that he insisted on working with Don Bluth to create An American Tail.

The Plague Dogs

Friday, December 12th, 2008
Movies Online

The Plague Dogs is a 1982 animated film based on the 1977 novel of the same name by Richard Adams. The film was written for screen, directed and produced by Martin Rosen, who also directed Watership Down, the film version of another novel by Adams.

The film’s story is centered on two dogs named Rowf and Snitter, who escape from a research laboratory in Great Britain. In the process of telling the story, the film highlights the cruelty of performing vivisection and animal research for its own sake (though Martin Rosen said that this was not an anti-vivisection film, but an adventure), an idea that was only recently coming to public attention during the 1960s and 1970s.

The theme song, Time and Tide, was composed and sung by Alan Price. The song, as well as dialogue from the film, was sampled by the Canadian industrial group Skinny Puppy for their single, “Testure”, from the 1988 album VIVIsectVI.

Plot

The story doesn’t shy away from depicting the violence and cruelty the dogs encounter throughout the story.

Rowf (a labrador-mix) and Snitter (a smooth fox terrier) are two of many dogs used for experimental purposes at an animal research facility in the Lake District of north-western England. Eager to escape the tortures of life inside the facility, an escape is managed. Initially relieved and eager to experience their new freedom the dogs are soon faced, not only with the realities of life in the wild, but with another more terrifying realization — they are being hunted by their former captors.

Differences between the film plot and the book plot are numerous and have substantial bearing on the outcome of the film. The most significant is that the survival of the dogs at the end of the film seems very unlikely, whereas in the book they are rescued and returned to Snitter’s original owner, who in the book has survived (in the movie he has not, making Snitter a true orphan.) Other differences are linked to the alteration of certain characters and to an overall compression of the time sequences and series of events outlined in the book.

Oh! Heavenly Dog

Friday, December 12th, 2008
Movies Online

Oh! Heavenly Dog is a 1980 comedy film written by Rod Browning. The film stars Benjean, billed here as Benji (she was the daughter of Higgins, who originated the role of Benji), Chevy Chase, Jane Seymour, and Omar Sharif. The film was directed by Joe Camp and released by 20th Century Fox.

Plot

Chevy Chase plays a private investigator who is called to a job and is killed upon finding a dead woman. The afterlife has not decided if he is destined for Heaven or Hell, so he is given the chance to return to Earth as a dog in order to solve the case and earn his way to Heaven.

Behind the scenes

Outtakes and behind-the-scenes footage from this film were used in making the short feature Benji at Work (1980), a 30-minute documentary about Benjean’s career as a dog actor.