Date: Thursday, August
16th, 2012 at 8:00pm
Venue: Oddball Films, 275
Capp Street San Francisco
Admission: $10.00 Limited
Seating RSVP to programming@oddballfilm.com
or (415) 558-8117
“There is something about the outside of a horse
that is good for the inside of a man.”
- Winston Churchill
Featuring:
Blackie the Wonder Horse
Swims the Golden Gate (B&W, 1938)
In 1938, Shortie Roberts,
owner of San Francisco’s famed Roberts-on-the-Beach restaurant, made a $1,000
wager with Bill Kyne, of the Bay Meadows race track, that his horse, Blackie,
could swim the golden gate, following Kyne’s assertion that horses couldn’t
swim. As will be made clear by
this impressive footage of Blackie in action, Kyne was obliged to pony up and
make good on his bet.
Philip and the White Colt
(Color, 1969)
Two years before
directing ‘70’s road classic Vanishing Point, Richard Sarafian made Run Wild, Run Free, which was then edited down to a shorter version intended
to be shown in classrooms. This
distilled version, lacking none of the atmosphere of the original, with its
fog-strewn English hillsides and extreme close ups of the eyes of the eponymous
white colt, is by turns moving and creepy. Philip (played by Mark Lester, who two years later would go
on to do the much more widely known horse film, Black Beauty) is a lonely mute boy with a troubled home life, becoming
drawn to a beautiful and mysterious white horse that roams the lush green hills
outside his family’s country home.
A girl with a falcon befriends him, as does a retired old colonel, who
teaches him to ride. But, although
the horse helps Philip find friends and, in turn, himself, an unexpected threat
befalls the benign beast, rendering him helpless and in need of Philip. Little known at present, this film may
well become a colt classic.
Directed by
Denys Colomb de Daunant with an unsettling ambient musical score by Jacques
Lasry, this cinematic poem uses slow motion and soft focus camera to evoke the
wild horses of the Camargue District of France, showing them as they bound over
the beach running through walls of fire and water. A remarkable film, at
once awe-inspiring and terrifying.
Milestones of the Century:
Horse Racing’s Greatest Spills (B&W, 1940’s)
1940’s newsreel footage
of, well, horse racing bloopers, without all the ‘bings’ and ‘boings’ in the
soundtrack we’ve become accustomed to (a la America’s Funniest Home
Videos). When slowed down, jockeys
and their horses tumbling en masse take on tragic dimensions.
From that lustrous MGM
musical Ziegfeld Follies,
directed by the one and only Vincente Minelli, this sequence brings together
Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly for some serious horseplay. A zany song-and-dance number, set to
the Gershwin tune, that will leave you beaming. Featured in Minelli’s characteristically dazzling set, and
prominently displayed behind Astaire and Kelly, sits an equestrian statue (our
link here), comically changing along with the duo’s costumes and
characters.
The Unicorn in the Garden
(Color, 1953)
An animated short film
based on writer and cartoonist James Thurber’s beloved domestic fable. When a middle aged man delightedly
reports finding a unicorn eating roses in the garden outside his house, his
unpleasant wife nags that mythical creatures do not exist, before, finally,
attempting to have him confined in a strait jacket and taken to “the booby
trap.” This film brings to life
Thurber’s wonderfully bubbly animation style, in brilliant Technicolor, with
lurid blues, yellows, and greens.
It’s no accident that Thurber was commonly regarded as a ‘horse-sense’
humorist.
The Rocking Horse Winner
(Color, 1977)
Adapted from the chilling
D.H. Lawrence story, The Rocking Horse Winner features another youngster in a strained familial
situation, who eavesdrops on his parents’ raucous quarrels over money. Desperate to cheer up his depressive
mother, who can no longer afford to pay the bills of their grand family estate
and who grieves that her “luck has run out,” and spurred on by whispers he
hears from the house that “there must be more money,” young Paul begins
secretly placing bets on horses through his sympathetic uncle (played by
Kenneth More) to raise money for his mom.
Little does his uncle know, however, that Paul’s miraculous winning
streak has been ill-achieved, through semi-satanic means. This film features black magic, a
trippy soundtrack, and a blood curdling climax.
Curator’s
Biography:
Landon Bates is a UC Berkeley graduate of English
Literature, has worked on several documentary film projects, recently acted in
a music video for the doom metal band Black Cobra, is the drummer for the
psych-rock duo Disappearing People, and is a cinephile whose obsession with
movies knows no bounds.