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Seabiscuit
The MPAA rated Seabiscuit (2003) PG-13 for some sexual situations
and violent sports related images.
Charles Howard (Jeff Bridges)
is a man who believes in second chances. Lucky for him, because
life deals this smooth-tongued entrepreneur one bad hand after
another. Despite his consummate skills as a salesman, he cant
talk his way out of the devastating results of a serious car
accident, a strained marriage or the financial woes of the
Depression. It is solely his faith in the future that keeps
him going.
After the business market stalls,
Charles, a car lot owner, and his wife, Marcela (Elizabeth
Banks), decide to invest in racehorses. But putting together
a stable of good racing stock, first-rate trainers and capable
jockeys on the California coastline proves to be a challenge
even for the optimist.
Scouring the options for a trainer,
he finds Tom Smith (Chris Cooper), a weathered mustang breaker
with loads of horse sense literally camped out in the bush
behind the barns. Later Red Pollard (Tobey Maguire), a feisty
former boxer with emotional scars and a blind spot, joins
them as a jockey. But Charles takes on his biggest reclamation
project when he lets Tom talk him into buying an ugly, abused
colt whose awkward gait and nasty disposition make his present
owner eager to be rid of him.
Tempered by Toms gentle
hands and unusual schooling methods, Seabiscuit soon embarks
on a racing career. Entering one event after another, the
undersized horse with the oversized rider begins to make track
history that amazes even jaded journalists and a world-weary
radio announcer (William H. Macy) who has to eat crow when
the long shot wins his first race. But beating the ponies
in the West is only a warm up to facing the blue-blooded Thoroughbreds
of the East Cost racing establishment and their top-rated
runner, War Admiral.
Based on the true-life events
of the 1938 Horse of the Year, the film initially jumps from
one storyline to another in an attempt to introduce all the
characters. Once it settles down, the script contains scenes
of cigarette and alcohol use by numerous characters including
a soused jockey. Verbal outbursts between owners and stable
hands frequently include profanities and athletes are subjected
to racing related injuries and beatings. One scene reveals
prostitutes in lacy underwear and brief back nudity along
with some bawdy behavior when the riders visit a brothel in
a Mexican border town.
However, aside from these moments
of content concern that blight the film, Seabiscuit is a beautifully
shot feel-good story of redemption that will engage most horse
loving teens and their parents. During an era when the whole
country longed for a return to better days, this unremarkable
horses astonishing rise to fame lent hope to the downtrodden
and discouraged. It gave the country something to cheer about
in a time when almost everyone could use a second chance.
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