![]() Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade A on scale of A to F. On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 72 out of 100, based on 43 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". The website's critical consensus reads, "A life-affirming, if saccharine, epic treatment of a spirit-lifting figure in sports history". On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 78% based on 206 reviews, with an average rating of 7.1/10. Elizabeth Banks as Marcela Zabala-Howard.Michael Angarano as Young John "Red" Pollard. ![]() Heading for the finish line several lengths ahead, Pollard explains that the story of Seabiscuit is not merely of three men who fixed a broken-down horse, but that Seabiscuit fixed them and, in a way, they fixed one another. ![]() With Woolf's encouragement, Seabiscuit surges ahead and passes the others. Seabiscuit drops far behind the field until Woolf pulls his horse alongside Pollard, allowing Seabiscuit a good look at his mount. Pollard, using a self-made leg brace, finds himself and Seabiscuit facing Woolf in the race. At the urging of Woolf and Marcela, Howard relents. When Seabiscuit is fit enough to race again, Howard brings him back to the Santa Anita Handicap, but is reluctant to allow Pollard to ride and risk crippling himself for life. Pollard, still recovering from his own injured leg, tends to the horse as they both heal. A few months later, Seabiscuit injures his leg. Seabiscuit takes an early lead until the far turn following Pollard's advice, Woolf lets Seabiscuit look War Admiral in the eye before surging ahead, and Seabiscuit wins by four lengths, delighting the nation. The highly anticipated "race of the century" draws a sellout crowd, with 40 million more people listening on the radio. Informed he may never walk again, let alone ride, he recommends that his friend and skilled jockey George Woolf ride Seabiscuit, advising him on the horse's handling and behavior from his hospital bed. As the race approaches, Pollard severely fractures his leg in a riding accident. With Seabiscuit at a disadvantage, Smith trains the horse to break fast at the sound of the bell. Riddle agrees, on the condition that they race with a rope and bell instead of a starting gate. Howard declares that Pollard will remain Seabiscuit's jockey, and rallies public support for a match race with War Admiral. Losing by a nose, Pollard admits his partial blindness to Smith. ![]() In the prestigious Santa Anita Handicap, Seabiscuit takes the lead, but Pollard's impaired vision prevents him from noticing another horse surging up on the outside. Riddle, owner of the East Coast champion and Triple Crown-winning racehorse War Admiral, but Riddle dismisses California racing as inferior. Under Smith's innovative training, Seabiscuit becomes the most successful racehorse on the West Coast and an underdog hero to the public. Smith witnesses Pollard's similarly temperamental spirit, and hires him as Seabiscuit's jockey. Fitzsimmons, Seabiscuit is viewed as small, lazy, and unmanageable. Though a grandson of the great Man o' War and trained by the renowned James E. Smith convinces him to buy a colt called Seabiscuit. When he acquires a stable of racehorses, he hires itinerant horseman Tom Smith as his trainer. He obtains a divorce in Mexico, where Pollard is struggling to make his mark as a jockey. Years pass and Pollard becomes a jockey, but amateur boxing leaves him blind in one eye.Īfter their young son is killed in an automobile accident, Howard's wife leaves him. In the wake of the Great Depression, Canadian John "Red" Pollard's family is financially ruined, and he is sent to live with a horse trainer. He is soon selling automobiles, becoming the largest car dealer in California and one of the Bay Area's richest men. Howard opens a bicycle shop in San Francisco. In the early 20th century, as America enters the automobile age, Charles S. At the 76th Academy Awards, Seabiscuit received seven nominations, including Best Picture, but ultimately lost all seven, including six to The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King. The film is loosely based on the life and racing career of Seabiscuit, an undersized and overlooked Thoroughbred race horse, whose unexpected successes made him a hugely popular media sensation in the United States during the Great Depression. Seabiscuit is a 2003 American sports film co-produced, written and directed by Gary Ross and based on the best-selling 1999 non-fiction book Seabiscuit: An American Legend by Laura Hillenbrand.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |