Academy Award-winning visionary filmmaker Kevin Costner directs New Line Cinema’s vast “Horizon: An American Saga” Chapters One and Two, a multi-faceted chronicle covering the Civil War expansion and settlement of the American West. A story of America too big for one film, this true cinematic event also stars Costner, who co-writes with Jon Baird (“The Explorers Guild”) and produces through his Territory Pictures.
In the great tradition of Warner Bros. Pictures’ iconic Westerns, “Horizon: An American Saga” explores the lure of the Old West and how it was won—and lost—through the blood, sweat and tears of many. Spanning the four years of the Civil War, from 1861 to 1865, Costner’s films will take audiences on an emotional journey across a country at war with itself, experienced through the lens of families, friends and foes all attempting to discover what it truly means to be the United States of America.
Opening in theaters on June 28, check out the incredible new trailer.
Costner stars alongside an impressive ensemble cast that includes Sienna Miller, Sam Worthington, Jena Malone, Owen Crow Shoe, Tatanka Means, Ella Hunt, Tim Guinee, Danny Huston, Colin Cunningham, Scott Haze, Tom Payne, Abbey Lee, Michael Rooker, Will Patton, Georgia MacPhail, Douglas Smith, Luke Wilson, Isabelle Fuhrman, Jamie Campbell Bower, Alejandro Edda, Wasé Winyan Chief, Michael Anganaro, Angus Macfadyen, Jon Beavers, Alex Nibley, Kathleen Quinlan, Etienne Kellici, Amos Jason Charging Cloud, Bodhi Okuma Linton, Gregory Cruz, James Russo, Jeff Fahey, David O’Hara, Chris Conner, Leroy M. Silva, Bernardo Velasco, Tom Everett, Glynn Turman, Giovanni Ribisi and more.
Costner returns to directing for the first time since his 2003 critically acclaimed hit “Open Range,” and revisits Civil War-era America, the setting for his 1990 blockbuster and directorial debut, “Dances with Wolves,” which won seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. He produces alongside Howard Kaplan and Mark Gillard, with Danny Peykoff, Robert Scannell, Armyan Bernstein, Charlie Lyons, Barry Berg and Rod Lake executive producing.
Costner is joined behind the camera by director of photography J. Michael Muro (“Billionaire Boys Club,” “Parker”), production designer Derek R. Hill (“Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan,” “The Magnificent Seven”), editor Miklos Wright (“For All Mankind,” “Open Range”) and costume designer Lisa Lovaas (“Ambulance,” “Transformers: The Last Knight”). The music is by Oscar nominee John Debney (“The Passion of the Christ,” “The Greatest Showman”).
A New Line Cinema presentation of a Territory Pictures production, “Horizon: An American Saga” will be distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures. The films will be released in theaters nationwide, the first on June 28, 2024, the second on August 16, 2024
“There’s nothing wrong with going nowhere, son. It’s a privilege of youth.”
Kevin Costner and Judd Nelson in FANDANGO (1985) will be available on Blu-ray April 12th from Warner Archive. Order it in advance at The Warner Archive Store HERE
FANDANGO: (fan-dang-go) 1. A lively Spanish dance. 2. The music for this. 3. A foolish act.
Academy Award winner Kevin Costner and Judd Nelson star in this story about five young men about to graduate from college in the summer of 1971, who take one last, wild trip across West Texas before facing their lives as adults–which will include marriage, careers, and service in the war in Vietnam–in this heartfelt and adventurous coming-of-age story. Kevin Reynolds (Waterworld) made his feature film directorial debut with this fan favorite.
“ It‘s a big day for American cycling, to have two Americans beat an Olympic champ. You must feel some pride.”
Kevin Costner in AMERICAN FLYERS (1985) will be available on Blu-ray April12th from Warner Archive. It can be ordered in advance from the Warner Archive Store HERE
“American Flyers,” Rex Reed wrote, “is a fine mixture of romance, humor, and tears with action sequences among the most exciting ever captured on film. It’s guaranteed to increase the viewer’s adrenalin.” Two-time Academy Award winner Kevin Costner and David Marshall Grant star as brothers struggling to win a world-class cycling competition — and regain the respect and affection they once shared. The painful events surrounding their father’s death have caused a rift. To bridge the gap, both enter the Hell of the West, a grueling race through the Rocky Mountains. While training and racing together, each confronts the fear that the congenital ailment that struck down their father could suddenly strike one of them. Written by Breaking Away Oscar® winner Steve Tesich and directed by John Badham (Saturday Night Fever), American Flyers is a dazzling, spirit-soaring spectacle.
“The one constant through all the years has been baseball.”
On Thursday evening in Iowa, MLB proved that the game of baseball is truly America’s great past time.
More than three decades after “Field of Dreams” seeped into the country’s cultural consciousness, with a one-year delay caused by the pandemic, one of the most famous cornfields in Hollywood history finally gets the opportunity to host real major league ball.
“Is this heaven?” the ghost of John Kinsella asked in the movie that inspired the game to be played Thursday between the Chicago White Sox and New York Yankees next to the actual site used in the 1989 film, which is maintained as a tourist attraction.
“No, it’s Iowa,” dutiful farmer Ray Kinsella — played by Kevin Costner — responded to his father with a smile before they played catch under the lights in the movie’s most poignant scene.
Fittingly, Costner was here, there and everywhere during the Iowa festivities, including on the field for a pregame ceremony that was everything a fan of this particular movie could have hoped for.
With dramatic music playing over the loudspeaker, Costner, holding a baseball, emerged from the cornfield beyond the outfield. He looked around, soaking in the scene, and then turned back to the outfield, where White Sox and Yankees players, dressed in throwback uniforms and looking so much like the characters in the movie, walked out from the corn fields. Just like the movie.
“Thirty years ago, on the other side of that corn, we filmed a move that stood the test of time,” Costner said to the crowd. “Tonight, thanks to the enduring impact that little movie had, it’s allowed us to come here, again, on a field that Major League Baseball made. We come to see a first place White Sox play the mighty Yankees, in a field that was once corn. It’s perfect.”
Players didn’t compete on the actual field used in the movie but rather one just a corn maze away.
MLB broke ground in Iowa in 2019 for a game that was originally set for the Chicago White Sox and the Saint Louis Cardinals. The diamond was designed to resemble that of Chicago’s Comiskey Park.
Thursday night, 8,000 fans were in attendance at the makeshift stadium. MLB conducted a public lottery for the opportunity to purchase tickets for those with Iowa zip codes.
This won’t be a one-time visit, either. Commissioner Rob Manfred confirmed that the Field of Dreams game will return in August 2022, with the teams to be determined.
In the end, the White Sox outslugged the Yankees 9-8 in the first Major League Baseball game in Iowa.
“We love numbers in baseball, and here is one to remember: 30,000 — as in, construction crews moved 30,000 cubic yards of material in order to clear the acreage and level the terrain necessary to build the MLB field. You’ll see why on Thursday night, if you notice the upward slope of the cornfields beyond the left-field (corn) wall. The terrain’s natural grade had to be smoothed in order to build an MLB-caliber playing surface.
As your eyes trace the outfield perimeter, you’ll notice a few more unique features. The batter’s eye is a perfect hitting backdrop, in the shape of a country barn with a dark brown hue. The bullpens are situated beyond the wall in straightaway center field, a nod to their location in the original Comiskey Park. And there’s a hand-operated scoreboard in right field, completing the aesthetic that would have been familiar to Shoeless Joe Jackson and the film’s fellow “ghost players.”
A Field of Dreams Game just wouldn’t be the same without “Field of Dreams” actors, and this event featured two. Fittingly, given how much the father-son theme of the film still resonates today, Ray Kinsella (Costner) and his pops, John (Dwier Brown) were part of the Iowa festivities.
“Hey Dad? You wanna have a catch?” Brown tweeted, while standing on the field.
Field of Dreams is about the Chicago “Black Sox” scandal that plagued baseball and that fascinates Ray Kinsella (Kevin Costner) as he undertakes an extraordinary gamble before setting off on a journey that connects him with three unlikely allies: reclusive author Terence Mann (James Earl Jones), baseball player Archibald “Moonlight” Graham (Burt Lancaster) and “Shoeless Joe” Jackson himself (Ray Liotta). With the support of his wife (Amy Madigan), Ray discovers the importance of long-sought forgiveness in director Phil Alden Robinson’s film, which has become synonymous with baseball.
Witness how far one family will go to rescue one of their own in the riveting and emotionally charged action-drama LET HIM GO, available to own now for the first time on Digital and on Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.
Now you can win the Win the Blu-ray ofLET HIM GO. We Are Movie Geeks has one to give away. Just leave a comment below telling us what your favorite movie is costarring Kevin Costner (mine’s THE UNTOUCHABLES. It’s so easy!)
1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES. NO P.O. BOXES. NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.
2. WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES
Based on the novel of the same name by New York Times acclaimed author Larry Watson, the intense thriller reunites Academy Award nominee Diane Lane (Trumbo, Unfaithful) and Academy Award winner Kevin Costner (“Yellowstone,” Hidden Figures) as a husband and wife who set out to save their young grandson from the clutches of a ruthless family. Hailed as “original and suspenseful” (Owen Gleiberman, Variety), the visually stunning, Rotten Tomatoes Certified Freshfilm is set in the 1960’s American West and explores the bonds of family, the power of love and the necessity of sacrifice. Featuring never-before-seen bonus content with the film’s cast and crew, LET HIM GO on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital includes exclusive extras taking audiences behind the scenes with the cast and crew diving deeper into the western-tinged drama.
After their life is set off course following the tragic loss of their son, retired sheriff George Blackledge (Costner) and his wife Margaret (Lane) leave their Montana ranch on a mission through the North Dakota desert to rescue their young grandson from a dangerous family living off the grid. Navigating tragedy and tumult, the couple soon discover that the Weboy family, a deep-rooted local clan led by ruthless matriarch Blanche (Academy Award nominee Lesley Manville; Phantom Thread, Ordinary Love) has no intention of letting the child go, forcing George and Margaret to ask how far they will go to fight for their family. Proclaimed by critics as “beautifully acted by Costner and Lane” (Glenn Kenny, The New York Times), LET HIM GO is filled with powerful performances and explores the strengths of family ties, the bittersweet and brutal cost of vengeance and the true stakes of heroism set against an iconic American backdrop.
Writer and director Thomas Bezucha (The Family Stone, Big Eden) delivers a “compelling” (Pete Hammond, Deadline) and intensely visceral adaptation that authentically brings a bygone era to life in the heart-pounding revenge rescue tale. With an exceptional cast lead by Lane, Costner and Manville, LET HIM GO is rounded out by Jeffrey Donovan (“Fargo,” Sicario), Kayli Carter (Bad Education, “Mrs. America”), Booboo Stewart (The Twilight Saga, The Grizzlies) and Will Brittain (Kong: Skull Island, Everybody Wants Some). Accompanied by a hopeful and haunting score by Academy Award® winning composer Michael Giacchino (Up, Jurassic World series) that pulls the audience deeper into the story, LET HIM GO’s phenomenal performances and majestic landscapes are punctuated by palpable tension and shocking moments of terror, raising the ominous mood of the “searing thriller” (Glenn Kenny, The New York Times) that will have everyone on the edge of their seats throughout the film.
With the purchase of LET HIM GO on disc or digital, fans are eligible to earn points towards special rewards via the Universal All-Access Rewards program. Members can redeem their points for digital movies, signed collectables, box sets, win exclusive prizes and more! For FREE registration and details please visit www.MyUniversalRewards.com.
BONUS FEATURES AVAILABLE ON BLU-RAYTM, DVD AND DIGITAL:
The Blackledges: Kevin Costner & Diane Lane – Stars Diane Lane and Kevin Costner share personal insights into their characters and why finally having the chance to work together was an opportunity neither party could pass up.
The Making of LET HIM GO – Take a deeper look at the emotional journey the Blackledges embark on, the period specific production design, and Director/Writer Thomas Bezucha’s inspiration in adapting the novel for screen.
Lighting the Way: Thomas Bezucha – Director/Writer Thomas Bezucha shares his process in developing the story while the cast and crew discuss what makes him the perfect person to bring this film to life.
Witness how far one family will go to rescue one of their own in the riveting and emotionally charged action-drama LET HIM GO, available to own for the first time on Digital on January 19, 2021 and on Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand on February 2, 2021 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Based on the novel of the same name by New York Times acclaimed author Larry Watson, the intense thriller reunites Academy Award nominee Diane Lane (Trumbo, Unfaithful) and Academy Award winner Kevin Costner (“Yellowstone,” Hidden Figures) as a husband and wife who set out to save their young grandson from the clutches of a ruthless family. Hailed as “original and suspenseful” (Owen Gleiberman, Variety), the visually stunning, Rotten Tomatoes Certified Freshfilm is set in the 1960’s American West and explores the bonds of family, the power of love and the necessity of sacrifice. Featuring never-before-seen bonus content with the film’s cast and crew, LET HIM GO on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital includes exclusive extras taking audiences behind the scenes with the cast and crew diving deeper into the western-tinged drama.
After their life is set off course following the tragic loss of their son, retired sheriff George Blackledge (Costner) and his wife Margaret (Lane) leave their Montana ranch on a mission through the North Dakota desert to rescue their young grandson from a dangerous family living off the grid. Navigating tragedy and tumult, the couple soon discover that the Weboy family, a deep-rooted local clan led by ruthless matriarch Blanche (Academy Award nominee Lesley Manville; Phantom Thread, Ordinary Love) has no intention of letting the child go, forcing George and Margaret to ask how far they will go to fight for their family. Proclaimed by critics as “beautifully acted by Costner and Lane” (Glenn Kenny, The New York Times), LET HIM GO is filled with powerful performances and explores the strengths of family ties, the bittersweet and brutal cost of vengeance and the true stakes of heroism set against an iconic American backdrop.
Writer and director Thomas Bezucha (The Family Stone, Big Eden) delivers a “compelling” (Pete Hammond, Deadline) and intensely visceral adaptation that authentically brings a bygone era to life in the heart-pounding revenge rescue tale. With an exceptional cast lead by Lane, Costner and Manville, LET HIM GO is rounded out by Jeffrey Donovan (“Fargo,” Sicario), Kayli Carter (Bad Education, “Mrs. America”), Booboo Stewart (The Twilight Saga, The Grizzlies) and Will Brittain (Kong: Skull Island, Everybody Wants Some). Accompanied by a hopeful and haunting score by Academy Award® winning composer Michael Giacchino (Up, Jurassic World series) that pulls the audience deeper into the story, LET HIM GO’s phenomenal performances and majestic landscapes are punctuated by palpable tension and shocking moments of terror, raising the ominous mood of the “searing thriller” (Glenn Kenny, The New York Times) that will have everyone on the edge of their seats throughout the film.
With the purchase of LET HIM GO on disc or digital, fans are eligible to earn points towards special rewards via the Universal All-Access Rewards program. Members can redeem their points for digital movies, signed collectables, box sets, win exclusive prizes and more! For FREE registration and details please visit www.MyUniversalRewards.com.
BONUS FEATURES AVAILABLE ON BLU-RAYTM, DVD AND DIGITAL:
The Blackledges: Kevin Costner & Diane Lane – Stars Diane Lane and Kevin Costner share personal insights into their characters and why finally having the chance to work together was an opportunity neither party could pass up.
The Making of LET HIM GO – Take a deeper look at the emotional journey the Blackledges embark on, the period specific production design, and Director/Writer Thomas Bezucha’s inspiration in adapting the novel for screen.
Lighting the Way: Thomas Bezucha – Director/Writer Thomas Bezucha shares his process in developing the story while the cast and crew discuss what makes him the perfect person to bring this film to life.
Diane Lane (left) stars as “Margaret Blackledge” and Kevin Costner (right) stars as “George Blackledge” in director Thomas Bezucha’s LET HIM GO, a Focus Features release. Photo Credit : Kimberley French / Focus Features
LET HIM GO is a Western set in early ’60s Montana, starring Kevin Costner and Diane Lane in a heroic fight, not to save a town as in a classic Western, but to rescue their grandchild. When their son James (Ryan Bruce) dies suddenly, he leaves a hole in the hearts of his parents George (Costner) and Margaret (Lane) Blackledge, as well as a young widow Lorna (Kayli Carter) and infant child named Jimmy. When their daughter-in-law remarries, things change, but then her abusive new husband, Donnie Weboy (Will Brittain), unexpectedly relocates his wife and stepson to join his family in his home state. There was no warning and the young couple left no address yet strong-willed Margaret is determined not to let her grandson go. George, a retired sheriff, tracks them to an area North Dakota. While Donnie’s name rings no bells with George’s law enforcement contacts nor locals in North Dakota, the Weboy names sure does, as a notorious, fearsome family led by a Ma Barker-like matriarch, Blanche Weboy (a fiery Leslie Manville). Despite the unlikelihood of success, Margaret and George aim to bring their grandson back to Montana, and embark on a mission to persuade the Weboys to “let him go.”
LET HIM GO is a bit of fooler, starting
out like a polite family drama with fine Oscar-bait cast and
settings, a drama about loss and a character study of the older
couple – until in the final act, when it transforms into something
more like a violent thriller.
Director Thomas Bezucha adapted Larry Watson’s novel of the same name. At first, LET HIM GO builds up a confrontation over child custody, a timeless topic, along with an exploration of the Blackledges’ anguish over possible loss of their lost son’s only child, as much a character study of the two people in this long marriage as anything else.
This drama is set against the sweeping
vistas of a Western landscape. It makes for a visually-pleasing,
award-minded drama but pretty conventional stuff. But then the film
takes an unexpected move, shifting into something else in the final
act, when the couple faces the wild Blanche Weboy (Leslie Manville),
the fiery matriarch of a violent, powerful family.
LET HIM GO has plenty of visual
references to classic Westerns, including those of John Ford, despite
to it’s mid-20th century setting. The finely crafted films has
gorgeous locations shots (actually shot in Alberta, Canada) that
include plenty of big-sky scenery, and lovingly perfect period
details in sets and costumes. But what seems like a mild, quiet,
thoughtful drama then shakes us up with a sudden turn into crime
thriller violence.
It is a jarring but thrilling shift but
it makes for an heck of an entertaining film, and one that works on
several levels, thanks largely to its sterling cast. That cast is
rounded out by Jeffrey Donovan as Blanche’s henchman like younger
brother Bill Weboy, and Booboo Stewart as a young Native American
hiding out in the North Dakota wilderness, who befriends George and
Margaret.
Both aspects of the film – the dramatic
exploration of a couple’s sense of loss as their only grandchild, the
son of their lost only child, is swept away from them when their
daughter-in-law remarries and what happens when they confront the
bullying Weboys – are well-crafted Yet taking what seems like a quiet
familiar family drama into this dark twist really changes what the
film is saying. The exploration of a couple grappling with loss
reaches a crisis when determined Margaret decides to track their
grandson with a reluctant George in tow, to the home of the
domineering matriarch of his stepfather’s family, Blanche Weboy, who
declares that the boy “is a Weboy now” and dismisses the
pain of the grandparents. But these two are unlikely to go away
quietly.
The reversal of the expected pattern of
the ex-sheriff leading this pursuit is one of many intriguing aspects
of LET HIM GO. The plot is entertaining but what really makes the
film cook are the performances. Leslie Manville plays the
iron-fisted, gangster-style matriarch of the Weboys, a family known
for violence who dominate their little corner of North Dakota. Kevin
Costner plays a steely, man-of-few-words retired sheriff, but also a
man with a dark view of life. At one point he says life is nothing
but a series of losses. He has serious doubts about what they are
doing but loyally determined to stand by his beloved wife. Diane Lane
plays that wife, a bit of a dreamer, who thinks she can talk anyone
into doing things her way, with a confidence in her own charm that
sometimes clouds her judgment. Her dreams about how it will all work
out aren’t always grounded in reality and it takes her plain-spoken
husband to make her see the facts. These flawed but appealing
characters are set on doing what they believe they must do, bring
their grandson back home to Montana.
The film upends expectations over and
over, after building an expectation of the comfortably familiar. The
couple look conventional at first but it is Diane Lane’s Margaret who
is the strong one, the one driving the quest to reclaim their
grandson, while Costner plays the more passive one who goes along,
reversing the expected gender roles. It is Margaret who is too
focused on her grandson Jimmy to see where she has gone wrong in her
relationship with her daughter-in-law.
The wonderful Manville is a glowing
menace in a wavy blond wig straight out of classic Nashville country
music, who brow beats everyone around her, including her younger
brother and three sons. She also dominated every scene she is in,
outshining her more famous co-stars. It is a meaty role and Manville
feasts on it. Manville’s Blanche is just as determined not to “let
him go” as Lane’s Margaret is to take young Jimmy back to
Montana with her.
The final showdown lights up the
screening in a burst of bracing violence, firing up the audience in a
thriller ending worthy of the best of classic drive-in Bs.
Kevin Costner and Diane Lane are back on the big screen together in Focus Features upcoming movie LET HIM GO. The two starred as Jonathan and Martha Kent in Warner Bros. Pictures SUPERMAN: MAN OF STEEL.
From director Thomas Bezucha, based on the novel Let Him Go by Larry Watson, check out the first trailer.
Following the loss of their son, retired sheriff George Blackledge (Costner) and his wife Margaret (Lane) leave their Montana ranch to rescue their young grandson from the clutches of a dangerous family living off the grid in the Dakotas, headed by matriarch Blanche Weboy. When they discover the Weboys have no intention of letting the child go, George and Margaret are left with no choice but to fight for their family.
The film also stars Lesley Manville, Jeffrey Donovan, Kayli Carter, Booboo Stewart, Will Brittain.
LET HIM GO is slated to hit theaters on November 6, 2020.
Kevin Costner in TIN CUP is available on Blu-ray From Warner Archive. Ordering information can be found HERE
An unreachable shot to the green. A hopeless romance. Driving-range pro Roy McAvoy can’t resist an impossible challenge. Each is what he calls a defining moment. You define it. Or it defines you.
With lady-killer charm and a game that can make par with garden tools, Kevin Costner rejoins Bull Durham filmmaker Ron Shelton for another funny tale of the games people play. For Costner’s Roy, golf is a head — and heart — game. On both counts, that’s where shrink Molly Griswold (Rene Russo) comes in. She’s big-city, Roy’s small-time, and he believes only the grandest of gestures can lure her away from a slick touring pro (Don Johnson) and earn her love. So Roy and his dutiful caddy (Cheech Marin) set out to do the impossible: win the US Open. With laughs, clever battle-of-the-sexes banter and a handy way with a 7-iron, Tin Cup winningly defines the moment and contemporary romantic comedy.
Writer/Director Ron Shelton (Bull Durham, White Men Can’t Jump) continues his winning streak of remarkable sports romances with this mid-90s fable of Roy MacAvoy (Kevin Costner), the greatest golf pro to never hit the big time. Zen master of the swing and the putt, Roy is content with his lot in life as a golf instructor at a driving range in the tiny West Texas town of Salome when Dr. Molly Griswold (Rene Russo) signs up for lessons and turns his life upside down. The quixotic Roy decides the only way to prove his worthiness to Molly – and steal her from her PGA star fiancé David Simms (Don Johnson) – is to win the US Open. Good thing he has best friend and brilliant caddie Romeo Posar (Cheech Marin) along to play Sancho Panza. Long requested, this fan favorite sports comedy arrives with all its wisdom and charm looking like a million-dollar trophy on 1080p HD. Theatrical Trailer (HD). 16×9 Widescreen
THE ART
OF RACING IN THE RAIN is the third film I’ve seen theatrically so far this year
narrated by a dog. A DOG’S JOURNEY and its cheesy-but-sweet knockoff A DOG’S
WAY HOME showed that a dogs-eye view of the world can make for funny, refreshing
and insightful cinema. THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN starts out well, but the
story quickly turns sad, then morose, then unsavory, then unbearably dull, falling
into one predictable cliché after another.
Though it comes with a stronger pedigree than the other two films (it was based
on an acclaimed novel by Garth Stein), it’s easily the worst of the three.
THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN begins with an old, dying golden retriever (voiced by Kevin Costner) reflecting on the highlights of his life and that of the beloved human who’d adopted him, amateur Formula One driver Denny Swift (a bland Milo Ventimiglia). He’s named Enzo after Italian motor racing legend Enzo Ferrari. Soon after getting Enzo, Denny falls hard for a pretty teacher named Eve (Amanda Seyfried). Though Eve’s wealthy parents Maxwell (Martin Donovan) and Trish (Kathy Baker) don’t approve of Denny’s risky profession, they marry and have a daughter, Zoë, who’s born when Denny is away racing in Daytona. Except for the loneliness that Enzo feels because Denny is spending more time pursuing his racing career, everything goes well for the young family in the early years. But tragedies happen in quick succession. Eve becomes ill with brain cancer (Enzo smells it early on) and moves in with her protective parents, taking Zoe with her. Then after about an hour of cancer drama, Eve dies and a battle ensues between Denny and his hateful in-laws who are so cruel they serve Denny with custody papers for little Zoë the day he buries his wife (though of course they are redeemed at the end). Through the ensuing tumultuous time, Enzo remains Denny’s steadfast friend, and a rambling witness to wrongs perpetrated against his human.
THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN has a pulse during the race track scenes but those are few and far between. The problem with the film (and it’s a big one) is that the middle 85 minutes (of a 110 minute film) is a cheap series of dramas little better than a daily soap opera that focus on cancer, death, child custody issues, bankruptcy, an auto accident, and a lame courtroom battle. Enzo occasionally comments on the melodrama with his less-than-insightful narration, but the story’s never really about him. The whole racing theme only exists so metaphors can be shoved down the audience’s throat with platitudes like “your car goes where your eyes go”.
As Enzo,
a gravelly voiced Kevin Costner sounds like a highly educated adult male bemoaning his inability to speak
and his lack of opposable thumbs. I assume this dialog must have worked better in
the novel (his favorite word seems to be ‘manifest’). Enzo claims he’s so wise
because he watches TV and has educated himself to go off on these philosophical
rants and is ready to go
to the next life reborn as a human. This is another area where A DOG’S JOURNEY
got it right. The dog’s voice in that was Josh Gad, who seemed to speaking in
that excitable “I’ve-just-met-you-and-now-I-love-you” tone
and saying dumb things I hope an actual dog might say if one could talk rather
than the tiresome and preachy new age bromides here.
I’m not saying THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN lacks emotion. It’s a tear-jerker of the highest order, blatantly tugging hard at the heart strings but there is nothing truly thoughtful or novel here. You’ve got a sweet little girl, a young mother suffering from cancer, and a devoted dog that grows old and dies. With these hard-to-resist elements it’s easy to wring tears out of an audience. There seemed to be plenty of sniffles in the screening I attended, but I wasn’t buying it this time. I usually enjoy a bit of sentimentality, but, especially with its treacly score and maudlin songs on the soundtrack, THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN produces more eye-rolling than tears.