Unusual among ’70s
live-action pictures from Walt Disney Productions in that the film is British
from top to bottom, devoid of physical comedy, and quite serious in tone, The Littlest Horse Thieves is a warm
period drama about English youngsters who cross class-system lines in order to
champion endangered ponies. Although the story has a certain inherently
sentimental quality, it doesn’t play out in a cloying way. In fact, the picture
occasionally recalls John Ford’s classic saga of Welsh miners, How Green Was My Valley (1941), even
though The Littlest Horse Thieves
occupies the familiar Disneyfied parallel universe in which good things always
happen to good people, even if tragedy occasionally forces kids to learn
valuable life lessons.
Set in Yorkshire in the early 1900s, the story concerns
a coalmine in which “pit ponies” are used to transport raw product from tunnels
to an elevator. The ponies live underground permanently, and the preteen children
of miners often sneak into the tunnels so they can help care for the animals.
When a new manager is hired for the mine, he determines that using mechanized
conveyances instead of ponies would increase productivity and profit.
Naturally, when the kids learn their beloved ponies are likely be slaughtered
after retirement, they contrive to kidnap the animals—but that’s only half the
story. This being a Disney picture, the second half of the narrative involves
adults rallying to the children’s cause, culminating in an overly convenient
crisis that forces everyone involved to recognize what’s truly important.
Even
though it’s filmed in rich color, The
Littlest Horse Thieves—which was released in the UK as Escape from the Dark—feels incredibly old-fashioned. The
horn-driven score occasionally sounds as if it’s being channeled through
rickety old speakers, and the presence of noted British actor Alistair Sim,
best known for playing Scrooge in the 1951 version of A
Christmas Carol, connects the picture to an earlier era of cinema. Yet none
of this is bad. Quite to the contrary, the musty feel of The Littlest Horse Thieves gives the picture a certain mythological
quality, like it’s a tale from a storybook sprung to life. And because the real
stars of the picture are not the wide-eyed child actors but rather the ponies
who “portray” the long-suffering service animals, key scenes radiate simple
honesty: Watching a pony relegated to life in lightless caverns is enough to
tug at all but the most tightly wound heartstrings.
The Littlest Horse Thieves: FUNKY
2 comments:
Burt Kennedy has co-story credit, even though it's not a Western.
British actor Alistair Sim, who gave the single greatest portrayal of Charles Dicken's Scrooge in cinema history (even to this day it has never been bettered and probably never will be) in his final film role.
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