Review of Big Red

Big Red (1962)
7/10
I even had the "Big Red" Golden Book!!!
30 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Disney could always be relied upon (back then) for wonderful, real entertainment but as one of the reviewers stated a lot of these films seemed to just vanish. I saw this film as a Christmas treat but did not see or hear of it again until over 40 years later when I found it on the Disney station. I did, however, have the Golden Book. Golden Books had been around since the 1940s and most Disney films were presented in picture book form as Golden Books. They were beautifully illustrated, about 30 pages in length, so you could keep re-living the movie.

The first thing I noticed in re-viewing this film was the bright, vivid Technicolor that Disney always used. James Haggin (Walter Pidgeon), a gruff dog breeder, pays the unheard of sum of $5,000 dollars for a prizewinning red setter. Rene (Gilles Payant), a young lad looking for work, meets Red and they become friends. He is given the job of being Red's handler and teaches him the fine art of hunting, as well as exercising him. Haggin is all business and is not happy that Red is becoming a pet. He takes Red up to the main house just before the big show but Red does not want to be separated from Rene and jumps through a plate glass window to be with him. Red is about to be put down but Rene runs off with him and nurses him back to health at his uncle's cabin.

He returns Red to Haggin but with a big scar on his body Red will never be a show dog again. Rene is still upset that Haggin wanted to put Red down - he feels he cannot work for him again. Red and Molly, another setter, are being shipped by rail to another owner but a careless guard leaves their cage open and they escape in the Canadian wilds. Rene hears about it and is determined to find them - which he does with the aid of his trusty harmonica. Haggin goes up in the mountains to look for Rene and Red saves him from being mauled by a mountain lion. Red and the lion's confrontation looked real - none of this CGI stuff!!! In the meantime Molly has her puppies and they look so cute.

This is a wonderful family film, not too long and with no forgettable songs to slow down the action. The location at Big Bear Lake was just so lush and green. Walter Pidgeon was his usual solid self. Gilles Payant was excellent as the young lad Rene. I wonder what ever happened to him and why this was his only film????

Highly Recommended.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed