The annals of
independently made family films from the ’70s include a few notable successes,
such as the canine caper Benji
(1974), but more typical of the breed is the cloying and lifeless Buffalo Rider. Apparently based upon the
real-life exploits of an unusual character from the Wild West era, the picture
delivers exactly what its title promises, and so much less. The movie does
indeed feature many scenes of a man riding a saddled buffalo, and the image has
considerable novelty the first few times it’s presented. Unfortunately, every
other element of the picture’s storyline is beyond trite, and while the actual
filming of Buffalo Rider is fairly
competent (with special notice due to the production’s animal handlers and
stuntmen), the editorial assembly of the piece is rotten. Suggesting there
might have been problems with the location recording of dialogue, vast
stretches of the picture are smothered in cornpone narration, and by the time
20 minutes of the movie have elapsed, only two inconsequential dialogue
exchanges have occurred. That said, once viewers get an earful of the acting in
Buffalo Rider, the narration seems
like a welcome alternative. Revolving around the exploits of immaculately
groomed mountain man Buffalo Jones (Rick Guinn), the story depicts Jones’
caretaking and training of a bison he names Samson. Discovering the animal as a
wounded calf, Jones raises the beast in captivity, and then throws a saddle on
the buffalo’s back once it reaches maturity. Thereafter, Jones and Samson
embark upon a meandering adventure that involves clashes with hunters, scrapes
with wildlife, and a vapid idyll with a frontier family. Excepting the fact
that hunters try to kill Samson for his hide, and the fact that the buffalo
occasionally scares off predators, Samson might as well be a horse, seeing how
little impact his specific breed has upon the overall story. Worse, the
filmmakers (including three directors and six screenwriters) run out of narrative
ideas at regular intervals. For example, one long passage comprises realistic
footage of a duel between a cougar and a raccoon, which seems more suitable to
a nature documentary than a fictional feature. Oh, and even though an opening
credit promises that Buffalo Rider
will be “Family Entertainment from Starfire Films,” the climax of the picture
involves a character getting trampled to death.
Buffalo Rider: LAME
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