Independently produced
family films from the ’70s can make for some of the decade’s toughest viewing,
because well-meaning amateurs attempting to create wholesome entertainment
often overlooked the importance of conflict in dramatic construction. As a case
in point, the equine drama Danny is
borderline unwatchable simply because every character in the movie is so
unrelentingly nice. The only adversarial forces in the movie are circumstance
and the occasional petulance of the leading character, a 12-year-old girl.
People in Danny tend to say things
like this: “See, Janie? I told you all it takes is a lot of hard work, and
maybe a little love.” In real life, meeting people as
kind-hearted as the characters in Danny can be transformative.
In reel life, encountering one-dimensional saints is boring. Directed by
first-timer Gene Feldman, who later made a string of puff-piece celebrity
documentaries for television, Danny
tells the story of Janie (Rebecca Page), a suburban girl who works on a farm as
a helper to Pat (Janet Zarish), a racehorse trainer. Janie has (mild) issues
stemming from the death of her father some years back and from the fact that her
mother is now seriously involved with a new man. Eager for a friend, Janie
fixates on Danny, a white horse acquired by the farm where Pat works. In
typically clichéd fashion, Danny’s got an injury, too—he goes lame—so he and
Janie nurture each other back to health. (There’s also a beyond-trite subplot
about Janie’s cutesy sorta-romance with a young boy who admires her.) Danny is a clumsy endeavor on every
level, from the forgettable story to the inert performances by actors who,
rightfully, never achieved notoriety elsewhere. The photography is basically competent,
and very young equine enthusiasts will enjoy the many scenes set in obstacle
courses, paddocks, and workout rings. Thanks to its good intentions, Danny
is impossible to hate, but the movie is so bland and unoriginal that the strongest reaction it engenders is indifference.
Danny:
LAME
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