Sequel, of sorts, to the 1944 'National Velvet.'
24 November 2023
In 'National Velvet' we witnessed 12-yr-old Elizabeth Taylor playing 14-yr-old Velvet Brown. She and her horse 'Pie' competed well in the Grand National but were disqualified on a technicality. Apparently her younger brother eventually made his home in the USA and had a 14-yr-old daughter Sarah who was orphaned when both her dad and mom died in an accident. As a result she was sent back to England where she was born, to live with her aunt who had a partner she was not married to, so she was still Velvet Brown. The movie begins with Sarah flying to England and meeting her aunt.

Tatum O'Neal who was 14 during filming plays Sarah Brown. At first she is very sullen, makes it clear that she doesn't want to be there, doesn't want to go to school, threatens to run away. But soon she softens a bit when the old horse 'Pie' fathers one more pony before being retired, Sarah takes a liking to the colt, and names it Arizona Pie. Soon she begins to make plans to try out for the British Equestrian Olympic team. (At 34 years between the two movies 'Pie' would be near 40 years old but I suspect we are to overlook that. Plus the 'Pie' in this movie looks totally different from the 'Pie' in the 1944 movie.)

Anyway Sarah's middle name is Velvet, thus the title since she hopes to compete internationally. The dates don't all quite work but I can easily overlook that in the interest of producing a plausible and interesting movie. Most of the last half-hour of the 2-hour movie is filmed like a TV telecast of the action at the Olympics, including glances of the Olympic village. And of course lots of realistic looking equestrian competition. They never really say what year it was supposed to be, but there are 'CCCP' sweatshirts in the crowd and a glimpse of a medal at the end shows 1980, the Summer Olympics held in Russia. Also a voice-over indicates that Velvet is now 40 years old, and during the Olympic competition Sarah is announced as an 18-year old and her horse, Arizona Pie, is 8 years old. It would take very 'fuzzy math' to reconcile all those numbers and ages.

But that is not a criticism, just an observation. We all know there is a healthy amount of 'creative license' in fictional movies. Overall I really enjoyed it, there is a connection of course to the 1944 movie but it is a quite different story. O'Neal is very good in the role.

I found it on DVD in a set of old horse themed movies at my public library. Good movie.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed