Seeing as how the classic
Anna Sewell novel Black Beauty (1877)
is told from the perspective of a horse as it changes hands through various
owners during its tumultuous lifetime, any film adaptation of the material
faces some built-in problems. This 1971 version of the tale, for instance,
portrays valiant steed Black Beauty as a sort of metaphor for goodness and
innocence, using the behavior of people toward the animal to communicate
Sewell’s themes. And while the absence of hokey anthropomorphization is to be
applauded, the lack of a real personality for the leading character is a
difficult problem for any film to surmount. Accordingly, the 1971 Black Beauty is a respectable endeavor
thanks to crisp cinematography and impressive production values, but the
picture doesn’t generate much emotional heat. Still, only the most hard-hearted
viewer could fail to be touched in some small way by the travails of a noble animal that
occasionally falls into the hands of horrific people.
Set in Victorian England,
the picture begins when Black Beauty is born on a rural farm. Witnessing the
event is angelic child Joe (Mark Lester), the son of a poor tenant farmer who
promises the newborn stallion to Joe as a pet. Joe raises the animal with great
care and affection. Yet by the time Black Beauty is a young adult, the farm’s
kindly owner has died and bequeathed his estate to a rotten son named Sam
(Patrick Mower). Sam seizes the animal, beginning a long series of ownership
transfers, some of which are to kind owners and some of which are to abusive
ones. Eventually, Beauty becomes the property of characters including a circus
owner (Walter Slezak), a principled soldier (Peter Lee Lawrence), and others.
Some sequences are brisk and purposeful, like the nasty interlude during which
Sam owns and mistreats Black Beauty, whereas others meander, particularly the
long circus episode. The transitions between vignettes are not particularly
graceful, because on some occasions Black Beauty simply stands in an empty
field after being abandoned by one owner until someone else comes along to
claim the horse and continue the story.
Furthermore, it’s awkward that Black
Beauty’s most important owner, young Joe, is portrayed via billing and posters
as a main character when in fact he’s out of the movie rather quickly. (On the
plus side, Lester—the star of the 1968 smash Oliver!—is a vapid performer who contributes very little to the
movie’s appeal, so his absence is appreciated.) Aside from the inherent decency
of the story and the undeniable grandeur of beautiful horses, the only
exemplary element of Black Beauty is
the cinematography by Chris Menges. His images are clean and spare, reflecting
a singularity of aesthetic vision the film does not possess on any other level.
FYI, director James Hill made a number of animal-themed pictures throughout his
career, including the charming hit Born
Free (1966) and such follow-ups as An
Elephant Called Slowly (1970).
Black Beauty: FUNKY
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