Said to be cool Black Beauty movie
Movie Issued - in 1994.
CREW: When Beauty be dream of Ginger after seeing her inwardly the capital, a crew beneficiary can be confidently see release Beauty and consequently duck into the shield of the realm. Also in setting of the pony run bad the front flash attached to his halter flap yawning awake into the atmosphere., CONT: When Joe first rides Black Beauty, the horse kneels down for Joe to get on him - Black Beauty only has a headcollar on. When you see Joe dismount, the horse has both saddle and bridle on., FAKE: In some parts of the film the horse playing Ginger is clearly a gelding. Ginger is supposed to be a mare., FAKE: The foal playing Black Beauty is a filly but Beauty is supposed to be a colt., CONT: When Beauty is walking around and around in his stall after Ginger goes crazy, his bearing rein is loose/practically undone. Although, after Ruben examines the wound on Beauty's leg, he undoes the rein., DATE: Black Beauty's mother, at the beginning, is freeze marked - a means of identification not available in those times., CONT: When John and Black Beauty arrive home after the storm, they are perfectly dry, despite the fact that John falls into a river and Beauty had no shelter from the rain., CONT: Ginger's blaze on her head changes through out the movie. That means there was more then one horse playing her and/or the blaze was painted., CONT: When young Joe is saying goodbye to Black Beauty at the new stables and removing his tack, the bridle switches between being on and off as the camera angle changes.
Crazy Credits: Black Beauty... Docs Keepin Time, American Quarter Horse
Black Beauty: Oh! If people knew what a comfort to horses a light hand is, and how it keeps a good mouth and a good temper..., Black Beauty: Good places make good horses., Black Beauty: We don't get to choose the people in our lives. For us, it's all chance.
'James Cosmo' (qv) was cut out of this film., 'Peter Davison (I)' (qv) filmed his scenes in ten days., 'Peter Cook (I)' (qv)'s last film., So far, this remains as of 2009, 'Peter Davison (I)' (qv)'s first, last and only theatrical film release.
Admissions: 290 (Netherlands) (1 January 1998)
Gross: $4,630,377 (USA)
Eskeland, Erlend. In: FilmMagasinet (Norway). (Oct/Nov 1995. Pg. 71, MG)
Novel: Sewell, Anna. Black Beauty
Certificates: Canada:F, Canada:G, Netherlands:6, South Korea:All, Australia:G, UK:U, USA:G, Singapore:PG, Iceland:L
Color Info: Color
Countries: USA, UK
Genres: Adventure, Family, Drama
Languages: English
Locations: Black Park Country Park, Wexham, Buckinghamshire, England, UK, Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England, UK, Chicheley Hall, Chicheley, Newport Pagnell, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England, UK, Thame, Oxfordshire, England, UK
Runtimes: 88
Sound Mix: Dolby SR
Tech Info: OFM:35 mm, PCS:Spherical, PFM:35 mm, RAT:1.85 : 1
Release Dates: USA:29 July 1994, UK:17 February 1995, Turkey:3 March 1995, Poland:5 May 1995, Netherlands:6 April 1997
In movie played:
Alun Armstrong (actor)
Articles: "Radio Times" (UK), 24 August 2002, Vol. 314, Iss. 4094, pg. 49, by: Nuala Giblin, "Face of the Week Alun Armstrong"
Interviews: "Radio Times" (UK), 5 November 2005, Vol. 327, Iss. 4258, pg. 40, by: Christopher Middleton, "Who the Dickens?"
Height: 5' 11"
Birth Notes: Annfield Plain, County Durham, England, UK
Other Works: Performed in original London cast of Les Miserables, as M. Thenardier, (November 2002): Plays Jack in "Mappa Mundi" play by Shelagh Stephenson (Royal National Theater: Cottesloe, London, England, UK)., (April 2006): Plays Pizarro in "The Royal Hunt of the Sun" play by Peter Shaffer (National Theatre, London, England, UK)., (1971) He starred in David Storey's play, "The Changing Room," with Warren Clarke, Brian Glover, Mark McManus, and directed by Lindsay Anderson at London's Royal Court Theatre.
Eye color: Blue, Alun was a member of the original London cast of Cameron Mackintosh's stage production "Les Miserables" which opened in 1985., He was awarded the Laurence Olivier Theatre Award in 1994 (1993 season) for Best Actor in a Musical for his performance in Sweeney Todd at the Royal National Theatre., Father of 'Joe Armstrong (II)' (qv). The two of them appeared in the TV series 'Between The Sheets'., He attended Consett Grammar School in County Durham, He has appeared in two versions of "Oliver Twist", and played a different role in each.
Birth Date: 17 July 1946
Vic Armstrong (actor)
Articles: "Los Angeles Times" (USA), 9 February 2003, pg. E6, by: David Gritten, "He's where the action is"
Brother of 'Andy Armstrong (I)' (qv), Father of 'Nina Armstrong' (qv), Was one of three stunt doubles for 'Harrison Ford (I)' (qv) on the Indiana Jones trilogy, even though Ford enjoyed doing his stunts himself. Armstrong looked so much like Ford that members of the cast and crew often mistook him for Ford. When Ford suffered a back injury making the second Indiana Jones film that required surgery, Armstrong filled in for him and filmed a good portion of Ford's stunts and fight scenes., His three children with 'Wendy Leech' (qv), 'Bruce Armstrong (III)' (qv), 'Scott Armstrong (I)' (qv) (who worked on the special effects crew in _Die Another Day (2002)_ (qv), and 'Nina Armstrong' (qv), have all worked in film production and/or stunts. Discussing the family team effort for _Die Another Day (2002)_ (qv), Armstrong said in an April 20, 2002, interview for Scotland's Daily Record about his sons (who were respectively 27 and 21 at the time), "I've got nothing to do with them - they are under another department. They loved stunts when they were younger, but they are mechanically minded. But my daughter Nina is a stunt woman and I worked with her in _Charlie's Angels (2000)_ (qv).", The world's most prolific stuntman, according to The Guinness Book of World Records., Quit school at the age of 14 to become a jockey., Worked with 'George Leech' (qv) before meeting his wife, 'Wendy Leech' (qv), on the set of _Superman (1978)_ (qv). All three were stunt doubles: Armstrong for 'Christopher Reeve' (qv) (Superman), Wendy for 'Margot Kidder' (qv) (Lois Lane), and George for the man in the burglar's office., Frequently said that his favorite movies to work on were the "Indiana Jones" series., Directed the opening scene of _Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)_ (qv)., Rode the horse that plunged off the castle wall into the ocean in _Never Say Never Again (1983)_ (qv)., Doubled 'Roger Moore (I)' (qv) in the shark pool fight with Kananga in _Live and Let Die (1973)_ (qv)., Was 'George Lazenby' (qv)'s double and stuntman on _On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969)_ (qv), a period which he likes to refer to as 'The best days of my filming career'., Played the first Ninja to enter Blofeld's volcano in _You Only Live Twice (1967)_ (qv).
Interviews: "Widescreen" (Germany), 3 May 2006, Iss. 06/2006, pg. 31, by: Thomas Raab, "Einen Film, der zu 99 Prozent aus Stunts besteht, will ich nicht sehen"
Height: 6'
Quotes: "Being a stuntman isn't contained by the direct of peculiar out of your awareness. It's the accurate different of that. Stunt industry be normalize, stillness, murmur thinking, justifiable reflex, active bulkiness and good attitude. And approaching foolish of muscular work." [Belfast Newsletter, 19 October 2002], [on doing the stunt in which a rider and his horse fall together:] "It's the hardest thing in the business. The poor old cowboys! It takes huge technical ability to time a horse fall. You've got to be on the right leg and on the right stride, so that when you give your horse the signal, he throws himself through the air. Then you've got to hold him all the way to the ground, for the safety of the animal as well, so he doesn't try to get out of it and break a leg. More often than not he turns over, and more often than not he's on top of you." [London Sunday Times, 20 October 2002], [re a stunt in _Superman II (1980)_ (qv) where he flies from a swimming pool up through the roof of Grand Central Station:] "We did this by building the set upside down with the ceiling over a pit in the studio floor and placed the camera upside down, and I dove from the roof of the studio through the ceiling piece into my catch rig. I only had three feet to turn from a vertical dive onto my back once I had gone through the ceiling piece before I hit the catch rig.", [on meeting 'Richard Todd (I)' (qv):] "Like owners do, he'd come down and look at the horses on a Sunday. I can still smell the aftershave. It's amazing. I didn't know what aftershave was then. I thought, 'Wow, how glamorous.'" [London Sunday Times, 20 October 2002], [on being hired by 'Jimmy Lodge (I)' (qv) to stunt in _Arabesque (1966)_ (qv):] "Jimmy doubled for 'Gregory Peck' (qv). I doubled for this other fellow, and we did this chase with helicopters following us and I thought, 'Wow, this is fantastic.' Twenty pounds a day! Phenomenal!" [October 20, 2002; £20 equaled $56 in 1965], "I'd never seen such money in my life, so I decided that this is what I wanted to do. ... To begin in the stunt business you have to have one skill. It doesn't matter what it is; mine was horse-riding; but you have to be a specialist in one thing. You might be a good high-diver, a good driver, a gymnast -- that's what you'll get hired for. Invariably, people can pick up those other skills along the way." [Belfast Newsletter, October 19, 2002], [on directing the second unit for _Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)_ (qv):] "We did the major sequences [the traditional] way -- including the boat, ski and helicopter sequences. It's by far the most economical way of doing it, otherwise there's so much time wasted and energy wasted -- especially if you've got the actors there for a limited time. But there were times when we would go off and shoot whole sequences and then put the actors into them. In those situations, [the director's] first unit became the good old insert unit! ... The thing about Bond films is that the spectacular footage is all real stuff. On _The World Is Not Enough (1999)_ (qv), we used digital effects very sparingly. I think that's the hallmark of the franchise: it is dangerous and people do the stunts. It is truly man against man, or man against nature, and I think it shows. It takes a hell of a long time to shoot those kinds of scenes, which is why I had a second unit that was running the whole time I was." [American Cinematographer, December 1999]
Birth Notes: Farnham Common, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
Birth Name: Armstrong, Victor Monroe
Spouse: 'Wendy Leech' (qv) (? - present); 3 children
Birth Date: 5 October 1946
Conrad Asquith (actor)
Sean Baker (actor)
Other Works: September 2005: Plays Thomas Mowbray/Earl of Salisbury in 'William Shakespeare (I)' (qv)'s "Richard II" at the Old Vic in London., Radio: Starred in the environmental drama "The Cry of The Bittern" by Tim Jackson. Co-starred 'Rachel Atkins (I)' (qv), 'Kelly Hunter' (qv) and 'Ian Pepperell' (qv). Directed by Peter Leslie Wild.
Angus Barnett (actor)
Angus Barnett starred encircled by three films also starring both Johnny Depp and Mackenzie Crook: Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End and Finding Neverland.
Born inside Ruddington, Nottinghamshire, 1963, Angus Barnett attached the Theatre of Cooperative Arts in Nottingham whilst a pubescent and go next to to teach via usage of an thespian at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, also as performing next to the National Youth Theatre in London. He enjoy perform widely on perform, plus in the give up 'The Red Daemon' in favour of the Japanese Noda Map Company, where on earth he tour Japan and Thailand. In the twenty-first century he become distinguished to express audience with his appearance in the 'Pirates of the Caribbean' pictures and be a previously owned to facade in opinionated role on British box, human being a beneficiary of the particularly big ensemble stereotype of the 2008 becoming accustomed of Charles Dickens' 'Little Dorrit'.
Other Works: BBC advert for TV licensing (2001), UK TV Advert for McDonalds (2002)
Height: 6' 1"
Sean Bean (actor)
Articles: "Premiere" (USA), May 2006, Vol. 19, Iss. 8, pg. 20, by: Jason Matloff, "Scene Stealer"
(6 November 1998) Daughter, Evie Natasha born, with 'Abigail Cruttenden' (qv)., He is a devoted follower of the Sheffield United Football Club., He was a presenter at the 1995 BAFTA Awards., In a scene midway through _Sharpe's Honour (1994) (TV)_ (qv), Sharpe and Marquesa Dorada are galloping down a hill on horseback when they suddenly tumble off the horse and land in the middle of a shallow stream. The scene is real; the horse stumbled as it was crossing the stream, sending Bean and co-star 'Alice Krige' (qv) down into the water. Director 'Tom Clegg' liked the scene and kept it for the final cut., Was not the first choice for the role of Richard Sharpe in the Sharpe series; he stepped in when an accident prevented actor 'Paul McGann (I)' (qv) from taking the part., Made his professional stage debut in Romeo and Juliet (as Tybalt) at the Watermill Theatre in Newbury, England, in 1983., (2002) Appeared in 'Moby (I)' (qv)'s video for "We Are All Made of Stars"., Was awarded an Honorary Doctorate degree from the University of Sheffield in England, in 1997., He has a "100% BLADE" tattoo on his left shoulder, in honour of his favourite football team, Sheffield United whose nickname is "The Blades". The tattoo is frequently converted (with makeup) into a scar - or a different tattoo - when he is filming., Has a scar over his eye given to him by 'Harrison Ford (I)' (qv) while shooting his death scene in _Patriot Games (1992)_ (qv). Ford accidentally hit him with a boat hook. In the Sharpe series, this was emphasised with makeup to add credibility to his character., He and his ex-wife, 'Melanie Hill (I)' (qv), have two daughters: Lorna and Molly., Says that he took the roles of Boromir and Odysseus because he was "tired of being known as a villainous actor" to American audiences (he says he was tired of playing just bad guys and wanted a change of pace and to play a sympathetic character or two)., Since February 2004, has been living in a London hotel after a burst water pipe flooded his house., He has retained his Sheffield accent., The only film awards he's ever won are from the Screen Actors Guild, the National Board of Review and the Broadcast Film Critics Association; these awards were all for Best Cast Ensemble for _The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)_ (qv), in which he only appeared for three seconds in archive footage.
Sean Blowers (actor)
Dick Brannick (actor)
Patrick Burke (actor)
Jim Carter (actor)
Peter Cook (actor)
Alan Cumming (actor)
Lyndon Davies (actor)
Peter Davison (actor)
Robert Demeger (actor)
Jonathan Hirst (actor)
Ian Kelsey (actor)
Andrew Knott (actor)
Julian Maud (actor)
Bill McCabe (actor)
John McEnery (actor)
Bronco McLoughlin (actor)
Paul McNeilly (actor)
Roger Morrison (actor)
Niall O'Brien (actor)
Rupert Penry-Jones (actor)
John Quarmby (actor)
Vincent Regan (actor)
Adrian Ross Magenty (actor)
David Ryall (actor)
Matthew Scurfield (actor)
Kiran Shah (actor)
Bill Stewart (actor)
Philip Taylor (actor)
David Thewlis (actor)
Graham Valentine (actor)
Anthony Walters (actor)
Freddy White (actor)
Graeme Alexander Young (actor)
Georgina Armstrong (actress)
Rosalind Ayres (actress)
Eleanor Bron (actress)
Keeley Flanders (actress)
Dido Miles (actress)
Gemma Paternoster (actress)
Emma Richler (actress)
Peter Macgregor-Scott (producer)
Robert Shapiro (producer)
Anna Sewell (writer)
Caroline Thompson (writer)
Alex Thomson (cinematographer)
Danny Elfman (composer)
Jenny Beavan (costume designer)
Caroline Thompson (director)
Claire Simpson (editor)
Margaret Adams (miscellaneous crew)
Vic Armstrong (miscellaneous crew)
Judy Britten (miscellaneous crew)
Nikki Clapp (miscellaneous crew)
Bill Daly (miscellaneous crew)
Robert Dawson (miscellaneous crew)
Kevin De La Noy (miscellaneous crew)
Gary Nixon (miscellaneous crew)
Nik Panic (miscellaneous crew)
Rex Peterson (miscellaneous crew)
Mary Temkin (miscellaneous crew)
Chris Warren (miscellaneous crew)
John Box (production designer)
By the way This movie is found also by requests horse, animal-rights, affection, fire, big-city, animal, compassion, farm-animal, child's-point-of-view, horse-actor, abuse, kids-and-family, based-on-novel, character-name-in-title
No comments:
Post a Comment