Film

Movie theaters, reviews and showtimes in New York, plus articles, trailers and more

 

Racing Stripes (2005)

Director: Frederik Du Chau

Average user rating
No reviews

Movie review

From Time Out London

During a particularly slow ten-minute period towards the end of this equine underdog film, the auditorium holding the media screening came alive with the babble and squeak of kids not concentrating. Mostly, however, Du Chau’s anthropomorphic live-actioner lollops along at a respectable pace, even though its predictable storyline has been done a zillion times.

Driving home in a storm, single parent and horse-farmer Nolan Walsh (Bruce Greenwood) chances on a zebra in a box in the middle of the road. He takes the bedraggled foal home where his young daughter Channing (Hayden Panettiere) goes gooey eyed and pleads with him to keep it. Months later, Stripes has grown into a handsome zebra with an identity crisis. The thoroughbred racehorses on the track next to the farm laugh at him, mocking his gait and un-horseyness. But might Stripes prove them (and every zoologist) wrong when he enters the Kentucky Open with Channing at the reins?

You can see where this is heading, right up to the slo-mo race sequence. Credit to the production team, though, some of whom worked on the ‘Babe’ films. They could have opted for CGI characters but chose the more difficult route of using real animals – albeit with animated lips and eyebrows. Dustin Hoffman, Whoopi Goldberg and Snoop Dogg provide the voices and trite jokes. Hardly groundbreaking stuff, but this ‘Seabiscuit’ for kids passes the time efficiently enough.

Author: DA

Time Out London Issue 1798: February 2-9 2005


  • Print this page
  • Send to a friend

What do you think?
Post your review now

clear rating
Min 1 star. Zero stars will be treated as unrated.

*mandatory fields





Features

Bridesmaid revisited

Bridesmaid revisited

Anne Hathaway crashes more than a wedding in Rachel Getting Married.

Old-school house

Old-school house

Even in the age of the multiplex, a few old movie theaters continue to thrive in NYC.

Keeping the faith

Hope abounds in Spike Lee’s latest—as it does in the director himself.

Going the distance

TONY toughs out the Toronto International Film Festival, blow by blow.

Race you to the top

Tyler Perry doesn’t need critics—and may not need new audiences.

Spanish intuition

Scarlett Johansson and Rebecca Hall flirt away an Iberian summer in Vicky Cristina Barcelona.

To air is human

Man on Wire, a new doc about a surreal Manhattan morning, aims high.