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I just saw Seabiscuit!

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  • Woo! I just got some little seabicuit stablemate figurines, i got seabiscuit, war admiral, and pumpkin. Surprisingly both Pumpkin and The Bicuit are bigger than War Admiral, lol!

    <3 Toby Two Socks <3
    A horse is like a best friend. They`re always there to nuzzle you and make your life a better place.
    <3 Toby Two Socks <3

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    • I saw the movie last night and I really enjoyed it. I was so drawn in to the emotional story that the horse swaps and such didn't annoy me much. I did notice the painted-over star on the one horse, however!

      My favorite part was the break for the Match Race, when they went to the original radio broadcast. It gave me goosebumps!

      __________________________________
      You put on the leather pants and the pants start telling you what to do. -Bono

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      • I saw the movie this afternoon, and really enjoyed it.

        Considering how detailed the book was, I thought they did a really good job of condensing it. Yeah, it's not totally true to the real story, but awfully darn close. And I think the fact that it's doing so well at the box office is a testament to the fact that they DID do a good job of telling a very compelling story in a way that people can relate to.

        Yeah, some of it was a little overwrought, and I have NEVER understood why Hollywood thinks horses neigh, nicker, and snort so much, but oh well. Minor quibble.

        Comment


        • I was talking to a friend of mine about Seabiscuit the other day. She is non-horsey, but loved the movie so much that not only is she reading the book, but now she wants to go to horse races in person. She went to see it with a group of people from her med school class. After the movie, she was chatting with one of the guys about the movie. He said he liked it okay, but it wasn't great...he thought it was "Kind of Hokey" - nobody had told him that it was a true story Kind of hokey.....

          "Never hold a cat and try to use a Dustbuster at the same time" - John McWethy

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          • Two Thumbs Way Up from this viewer! Two Words: Great Movie. Two More Words: Gary Stevens! What's all these early posts about seeing Gary with hair? It's a piece? Or is everyone just used to seeing him in a skullcap?
            Regardless, who looks at his hair when you could look at/into/drown in his eyes??

            I deliberately watched the movie, not the scenes, so I didn't bother noticing the horse swaps. I mean I'm old enough to know that swapping horses is going to happen in H'wood, so there's no point in making myself nuts when it occurs, however poorly done!

            Glad to see that Gary has signed w/ a casting agency. Looking forward to seeing more of him. Unlike many film heartthrobs, he won't tower over me

            I also found myself wondering if this film will bring more people to the race track. I hope so!

            ~Kryswyn~
            "Always look on the bright side of life, de doo, de doo de doo de doo"
            ~Kryswyn~ Always look on the bright side of life, de doo, de doo de doo de doo
            Check out my Kryswyn JRTs on Facebook

            "Life is merrier with a terrier!"

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            • Was anyone else exhausted after seeing this movie? I don't know if it was being so emotional (10 tissues for me!) or what.

              Loved the movie and thought the acting was superb!!!

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              • Piper,

                YES! We just got home, and both of us are stiff and sore and completely exhausted from being so tense throughout the movie!

                I LOVED IT.

                &gt;^.,.^&lt;


                "I try to take one day at a time, but sometimes several days attack me at once."
                ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                You can't have everything. Where would you put it all?

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                • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Kryswyn:
                  What's all these early posts about seeing Gary with hair? It's a piece?<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                  Reuters photo Seabiscuit premiere - Gary Stevens

                  Comment


                  • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Adelita:
                    Piper,

                    YES! We just got home, and both of us are stiff and sore and completely exhausted from being so tense throughout the movie!

                    I LOVED IT.
                    <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                    I was stiff too, and I couldn't figure out why. LOL. I had so much adrenaline pumping by the end of the movie that I drove home like a bat out of hell. I don't even remember the last time I was that fired up over anything

                    Can't wait to go see it again!

                    _____________________________
                    "It takes a whole lot of testosterone to wear a beret and not look fruity"
                    **
                    PMU foals- better than you think!
                    "smile a lot can let us ride happy,it is good thing"

                    My CANTER blog.

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                    • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Piper:
                      Was anyone else exhausted after seeing this movie? I don't know if it was being so emotional (10 tissues for me!) or what. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

                      OMG! I thought I was the only one who cried thru it! I kept thinking "I loff my OTTB"...and I was SOOOOO tense during the races...I can't wait to go hug my horse tonite! Am going to re-read the book (read so long ago I'd forgotten the story) and go see the movie again...and I NEVER go to the movies!
                      And along the lines of bad memory...what was the line? "You don't end a life just because something is broken"? Or something like that? THAT ONE REALLY HAD ME CRYING...Long live the OTTB lawn ornaments!

                      My horse bucked off your honor student!

                      [This message was edited by seahorse on Aug. 08, 2003 at 11:40 AM.]

                      Comment


                      • ok, I'm going to play armchair director here. Things I would have liked to have seen:

                        I wish they'd tacked on another 10 minutes to the movie, after the biscuit wins the hundred-grander, they should have gone back to narration mode (love that guy's voice) and told in-a-nutshell stories about the end of Seabiscuit's life, the 'rest of the story' of Charles Howard and Red Pollard and George Woolf, just like the book did. that's one of the things I loved about the book, was how it followed them after their 'fifteen minutes of fame' to the end of their lives. It could have been done with narration and stills of real pics. I think the whole narration thing went a long way to capturing the 'feel' of the book.

                        The part in the book where she describes that Seabiscuit is buried somewhere under an oak tree on what used to be the Howard farm made me want to drive down to northern California and look for it! After I read that book I started perusing eBay for Seabiscuit memorabilia, even came across someone selling a trophy he'd won for a stakes race. I sooo wanted to find a Seabiscuit hat! I did end up buying one of the Jerry Cooke prints of Seabiscuit beating War Admiral. You can get them fairly cheap and its way cool how George Woolf is on that horse tight as a tick.

                        All in all, I loved the movie, and want to go see it again ;-) I think it was brilliant they used Gary Stevens (and yes I was taken aback too when I saw him I had no idea how cute he is) and that was Chris McCarron who rode War Admiral and apparently he helped them design the racing sequences too.

                        I did hear someone complain about the shots where its obvious they are on horse-dummies (this person called them Equicizers) Why didn't they just teach Tobey to ride? The shots were close-up enough he wouldn't have even had to have his stirrups at jockey length. Those scenes could have been done for real, no?! They didn't bother me that much, but I guess I'm used to seeing fakey stuff in horse movies, we have to just ignore that stuff unfortunately.

                        *member of the connemara clique and the adults riding ponies clique*

                        Comment


                        • oh, and another thing I would have changed ;-) since I'm playing director !!

                          I would have played out the Hundred-Grander like it really happened, like its described in the book. He didn't fall that far behind, he was just off the pace, and for awhile there Red couldn't find a hole. when one opened up, it was only just barely big enough, he knew there was a possibility of clipping his bad leg. but he went for it anyway, and missed being clipped by an inch or so.

                          I'd also forgotten (I should re-read the book now) that he'd broken his leg twice, not the once the movie shows.

                          I gotta also say I had doubts about Tobey Maguire. too boyish. I just didn't think he was a good fit for the part. I'm still not so sure. he just doesn't seem tough enough. Who would have been better?

                          All that said, I did still love the movie, and plan on seeing it again and plan on owning it ;-)

                          *member of the connemara clique and the adults riding ponies clique*

                          Comment


                          • I'm backwards - I saw the movie first, and now I'm halfway through the book (which is AWESOME, btw).

                            malarkey, Tobey wasn't allowed to ride the race scenes because of contract obligations for the Spiderman sequel.

                            My complaints were that the horses 'talked' way too much (why do people think that a horse always makes noise?). The other thing that slightly bugged me was when Tobey was doing the race scenes on the Equisizer, and his arms looked pretty unnatural - like he was pushing the horse's neck up and down, rather than forward and back But those are my only nitpicks. Loved Gary Stevens as George Woolf, too. Great movie

                            ------------------------------
                            Whenever I feel blue, I start breathing again.
                            "These are my principles. If you do not like them, I have others." --Groucho Marx

                            Comment


                            • "but the foal they show being put on the trailer is much younger (my vet was sitting next to me, and we both LOL at the discrepency);"

                              I haven't read this entire thread, but I am amazed because I think I am the only one that noticed that this foal wasn't even a colt, it was a filly. You have to have really sharp eyes to notice, because it's over in a split second. Anyway, they show the young Seabiscuit being loaded on a trailer from the back, and it is definitely a filly.
                              Anyway, I don't usually pick on mistakes in horse movies, I just try to enjoy the films, and I loved Seabiscuit! Took my Mom, who is not a horse person at all, and she just raved about it. Don't miss it.

                              Comment


                              • I wrote a review that's on Towerheads, if anyone is interested.

                                Nigel: http://community.webshots.com/album/68326373whlDAm
                                Lorenzo: http://community.webshots.com/album/74700172fvoxFq
                                Teddy Boy: http://community.webshots.com/album/74981587sGtSKT

                                "When I bestride him, I soar, I am a hawk: he trots the air; the earth sings when he touches it; the basest horn of his hoof is more musical than the pipe of Hermes."
                                -- Shakespeare, Henry V

                                Member Sighthound Clique
                                Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will. - Gandhi

                                Comment


                                • I wrote that in my review that Tobey Maguire did a great acting job, but I, too, thought he was a little boyish. He didn't have that empty look in his eyes the way imagined Red.

                                  Nigel: http://community.webshots.com/album/68326373whlDAm
                                  Lorenzo: http://community.webshots.com/album/74700172fvoxFq
                                  Teddy Boy: http://community.webshots.com/album/74981587sGtSKT

                                  "When I bestride him, I soar, I am a hawk: he trots the air; the earth sings when he touches it; the basest horn of his hoof is more musical than the pipe of Hermes."
                                  -- Shakespeare, Henry V

                                  Member Sighthound Clique
                                  Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will. - Gandhi

                                  Comment


                                  • <BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by J. Turner:
                                    I wrote that in my review that Tobey Maguire did a great acting job, but I, too, thought he was a little boyish. He didn't have that empty look in his eyes the way imagined Red.
                                    <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Oh god that's it J. Turner!! I wanted the milage to show in this character's face, and I really don't think Tobey pulled that off.

                                    *member of the connemara clique and the adults riding ponies clique*

                                    Comment


                                    • I saw it the day it came out LOVED IT!

                                      Gary Stevens, who I love!!, and Chris McCarron (sp?) used to play around with me, like throw me around and hold me ect when I was like 2 at the Santa Anita Track. My mom and dad lived around there shortly when I was younger and my grandfather trained there and knew the two jockeys. My mom told me this story after we saw the movie and I was like, how cool?

                                      ~Hakunah Matatah!!!
                                      Hakunah Matatah,
                                      Katrina
                                      http://community.webshots.com/user/vivadusty

                                      Comment


                                      • This is what i wrote in my review which appeared in Towerheads:

                                        If anyone in the publishing, writing industry would be willing the to read the whole thing and give me any feedback on writing in this genre, I'd appreciate it. I'll email it.

                                        Bridges had played a similar role before in Tucker. Cooper spent time growing up on a ranch riding horses. Both slip into their roles seamlessly. Tobey Maguire’s role was far more of a reach. While he had learned previously to ride for Ride with the Devil, he had to lose twenty extra pounds off his 5’8”, “Spidey”-buffed physique to play the tormented jockey, Red Pollard, who, at 5’7”, tortured himself with weight-loss techniques that would put most anyone in in-patient therapy today. However, Maguire doesn’t completely capture Pollard’s spiritual void that Hillenbrand portrays in her history. Probably, the many cuts Ross as screenwriter had to make from the book gave Maguire less fodder to draw from. His alcoholism is given a passing nod at while it became a major issue in real life. The length of time he had to endure riding at backwoods tracks, fighting to make weight and boxing is vague and truly aged Pollard before his time. Maguire’s weight loss sucks in his features, making them more peaked, along with his pale Irish features do a decent job of imitating Pollard, but the age wasn’t in his eyes. On the other hand, Maguire does exude Pollard’s anger and resentment which is at odds with his truly caring nature. He proudly refuses assistance from flamboyant and successful jockey, George Woolf, played by jockey Gary Stevens, passed out from a boxing knockdown and too many tequilas at Mexico’s racing scene. But Maguire allows you to see Pollard’s softer side as he meets the over-the-top rebellious Seabiscuit for the first time, offering him half an apple, telling him he’s not afraid. Maguire looks reasonably comfortable on a horse, even in jacked-up racing stirrups. During the Biscuit’s rehab stint on the Howard ranch, Maguire canters him around a makeshift exercise “track” mown in the grass. Although he could wrap his fingers around the reins, his seat looked soft and natural.

                                        Nigel: http://community.webshots.com/album/68326373whlDAm
                                        Lorenzo: http://community.webshots.com/album/74700172fvoxFq
                                        Teddy Boy: http://community.webshots.com/album/74981587sGtSKT

                                        "When I bestride him, I soar, I am a hawk: he trots the air; the earth sings when he touches it; the basest horn of his hoof is more musical than the pipe of Hermes."
                                        -- Shakespeare, Henry V

                                        Member Sighthound Clique
                                        Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will. - Gandhi

                                        Comment


                                        • In the new Entertainment Weekly, there's an article on the summer's box office winners and losers. They're putting Seabiscuit near the top of the winner's list It's playing consistently well and getting good word of mouth, which is great to hear! Good to know the public at large is enjoying the story.
                                          A Year In the Saddle

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