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All The Pretty Horses on DVD (2000)

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Average rating: (60%)
121111020111214
2.5
 
Starring: Matt Damon | Penelope Cruz | Henry Thomas | Lucas Black | Ruben Blades | Miriam Colon | Bruce Dern | Robert Patrick | Sam Shepard
Director: Billy Bob Thornton
Studio: SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 112 mins
Certificate: 15
User collections: Films to watch with teenage boys
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Subtitles: Arabic, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish
Released: 05/11/2001
Also Available on:  Also Available on: DIGITAL

Brief synopsis of All The Pretty Horses

Billy Bob Thornton's ALL THE PRETTY HORSES is about John Grady Cole (Matt Damon), a young rancher growing up just after WWII. After his mother sells the family ranch, John convinces his best friend, Lacey Rawlins (Henry Thomas), to accompany him to Mexico, where ranching is still a big part of life. Along the way they meet Jimmy Blevins (Lucas Black), a winningly enthusiastic boy with a volatile nature. Eventually, John and Lacey end up on a huge ranch south of the border, where John falls for the wealthy rancher's daughter (Penelope Cruz). This leads to deadly trouble for the two young men, but John won't be dissuaded from pursuing his new love. Thornton has made a credible modern Western with this film, which gets strong performances from Damon, Cruz, Thomas, and, in a star-making turn, Black as the fiery Blevins. ALL THE PRETTY HORSES is at its best when focusing on the dusty details of the ranchers' hard existence. Barry Markowitz's cinematography and Ted Tally's script (based on Cormac McCarthy's much-loved novel) capture a sweet and melancholy flavor in depicting a way of life that seemed long since lost even while a hardy few were still living it.

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 3 stars out of 5 Radio Times

Fans of Cormac McCarthy's great modern western novel may not be too enamoured by the overly schematic treatment it has received here under Billy Bob Thornton's measured direction. Despite its many flaws (one being Matt Damon's inability to carry the central emotional load), All the Pretty Horses retains much of its source novel's power and romantic nostalgia, thanks to a remarkably faithful script by Silence of the Lambs screenwriter Ted Tally. Finding himself without a home or future when his beloved ranch is sold out from under him by his estranged mother, John Grady Cole (Damon) and his best buddy Lacey Rawlins (Henry Thomas) head to Mexico to become the cowboys they'd always dreamt of being. But in 1949 the cowboy life turns out not to be so much a career option as a difficult rite of passage encompassing chance encounters (with outlaw teen Jimmy Blevins, played by Lucas Black in the film's best performance), forbidden love (with the aristocratic Alejandra as played by Penélope Cruz still failing to find her feet in a non-Spanish film), a spell in prison (where Damon fights for his life in the picture's most riveting sequence), a shocking execution and a final personal reckoning. Although epic in visual presentation and sweeping style, Thornton's often too remote drama is very much a sum of its episodic parts. Nor is there much chemistry between Damon and Cruz, and that greatly undercuts one of the story's key themes. Yet for every fudged moment there's one of extraordinary power and beauty and that makes Thornton's fitfully striking revisionist western very much a mixed blessing.

Rating of 1 
	  stars out of 4 Halliwell's Film Guide

A uneven attempt at an elegiac Western, combining nostalgia for a vanishing way of life with a coming-of-age narrative; but the central romance has no life to it, and it ends up as just another love story between two men and their horses.

Box Office

"...An authenticity that is consistently invigorating thanks to taut, finely-tuned contributions from both cast and crew..."

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 3 starsSomething missing.

KDP from Lancashire England , 13/04/2005

This film has the basis of a good tale (as the book surely is) but it's spoilt by the total lack of presence shown by Penelope Cruz ( what's all the fuss about??). I would like to have seen a lot more of Jimmy Blevins (played by Lucas Black),and for his performance I give the whole 3 stars.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starspretty boring stuff

thebexter from Oxted , 04/09/2005

i personally found this film quite boring, i think it is more of a guys film especially those that like watching cowboys.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starsAnd the point of all this is....?

A customer from uk , 10/05/2004

A seriously disjointed film which left me feeling totally unsatisfied. The plot moves on from one storyline to another without making it clear what the point is and why we're bothering to follow it at all.

Apparently Thornton originally made this film a lot longer and was told to cut it down. It really shows. It just about kept me interested to the end, thanks to the enjoyable photography and I expect the book is worth a read. The film is a let down.

  1 out of 2 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 3 starsAverage telling of a great story

Norman Barry from Manky Manc , 11/05/2006

This film is based upon Cormac McCarthy's astonishing book of the same title, but it fails to live up to the high standards set by the novelist. The story tells the tragic story of an American farmboy who feels driven to Mexico where he experiences the struggles and hardship of a foreigner in an unfamiliar land.

The film sacrifices much of the tragedy, presumably for time. But it's none the better for it. The acting is fine, the scenery is amazing. But so much more could have been made of the story.

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