- Studio: Fox 2000 Pictures
- Release Date: Oct 20, 2006
- Critic Score
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90It's not really either an animal or a kids' film but rather a young adult drama that rings emotionally true.
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83It is purely and fearlessly a girl-and-her-horse movie that isn't trying to be all things for all audiences.
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80So those seeking a softer approach to the realities of both child- and animal-rearing should search elsewhere. The rest of us, meanwhile, are free to enjoy a well-made family drama pitched to young adults that's honest, tough and surprisingly engaging.
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75The film paints a fairly realistic portrait of four people bound by blood but -- like all of us -- all too capable of underestimating each other.
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75The best parts of Flicka are its pinch-me optimism and its old-fashioned-movie flourishes.
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75It's hard to argue with the movie's big heart, solid craftsmanship, likable characters, decent acting, gorgeous scenery or the fact that it's going to leave its audience blubbering and smiling.
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67As for our heroine (Lohman), her archetypal struggle with crusty Pa (uncrusty Tim McGraw) feels attitude-heavy and life-lesson-light.
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67Give Flicka credit for one thing: It stays on message. Set against the gorgeous backdrop of a Wyoming mountain range--a view this time unobstructed by the gay cowboys who so alarm family audiences--the film offers up fantasy footage for every strong-willed girl who ever straddled a saddle, and little more.
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63With some movies, you know exactly what you're going to see before you even enter the theater, and Michael Mayer's Flicka is one of them: You've got your girl, you've got your horse, and you've got your strict father trying to keep them apart.
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63Mayer knows how to tug at the heartstrings, and his admirably restrained cast keeps the family drama from becoming too sugary.
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63One casting wild card is the country singer Tim McGraw, and he's very solid in the role of Katie's horse-rancher dad, the kind of guy whose hard-headedness can't mask the size of his heart.
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Yet -- and this must be said in all fairness -- as things progress, the magic of the story asserts itself over the audience.
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60An entertainingly ridiculous update of Mary O’Hara’s 1941 children’s novel, “My Friend Flicka.”
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50A thoroughly uninspiring drama that ultimately buckles under Michael Mayer's weighty direction.
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50A modernized version of that great sentimental horse movie, 1943's "My Friend Flicka," and it comes with the shiny trappings, high professionalism and glamorous accessories you might expect...Something is missing though.
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50There are some nice moments and beautiful scenery, but the film is often slow and the dialogue is overwrought.
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50Another miscalculation by sophomore director Michael Mayer.
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40It takes a pristine gift for mediocrity to ruin Mary O'Hara’s muscular children's novel about a wild boy and his wild horse, but director Michael Mayer has brought off the massacre with aplomb.
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38As misconceived as it is corny and predictable.
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38If all you ask of a movie is that it have scenic stars and some scenery (here the Sierras of California substitute for the Rockies of Wyoming), then Flicka is adequate. Me, I expected some conflict, some resolution, and a horse that took me on a wild ride. This one really never gets out of the gate.
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No doubt the most devoted horse lovers in the tween set will get their fill, but parents should sneak out for a very long popcorn break.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 8 out of 14
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Mixed: 1 out of 14
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Negative: 5 out of 14
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SarahV.9i thought it was great and TIm McGraw did an amazing job. Great cast, great acting, beautiful setting, great story.
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DrunkenF.0Serious right? Boring, kids control parents. Awful.
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GlueGuy0