IMDb RATING
6.3/10
438
YOUR RATING
A young boy tries to train Thunderhead, a beautiful white colt and the son of his beloved Flicka, to be a champion race horse.A young boy tries to train Thunderhead, a beautiful white colt and the son of his beloved Flicka, to be a champion race horse.A young boy tries to train Thunderhead, a beautiful white colt and the son of his beloved Flicka, to be a champion race horse.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Enjoyable. Very colorful. Beautiful scenery, but lacks the success and impact of the original MY FRIEND FLICKA(1943). A young boy(Roddy McDowall)tries to train an albino colt into a race horse. Other players are:Preston Foster, Rita Johnson and a very cute Diana Hale. This 78 minute technicolor film is full family fare.
Oh, no; the reviewer who was "Too Old To See The Fantasy" was also, apparently, too old to see the balls. There were *definitely* testicles, in this film, on both the stallions (definitely stallions!).
This film will never lose its allure for the horse-crazy, though one wonders "how" they filmed certain sequences, such as the 'fight to the death' scene, in the years of trip-wires and prior to the disclaimer "no animals were hurt or abused in the making of this film". That horse-fight sequence was (mostly, if not entirely) the real thing; they put two stallions together and let them go at it. My guess is that they sedated the one horse who was "killed", for the final shot.
Still a winner, for the kid who just can't get enough of horses!
This film will never lose its allure for the horse-crazy, though one wonders "how" they filmed certain sequences, such as the 'fight to the death' scene, in the years of trip-wires and prior to the disclaimer "no animals were hurt or abused in the making of this film". That horse-fight sequence was (mostly, if not entirely) the real thing; they put two stallions together and let them go at it. My guess is that they sedated the one horse who was "killed", for the final shot.
Still a winner, for the kid who just can't get enough of horses!
When I first saw this film as a child, on a B&W TV, I thought The Albino was the most beautiful horse I had ever seen.
50 years later the film still has its moments and Beautiful Scenery. But why do we get Gus's girl instead of Ken's older brother, Howard? Gus didn't have a girl. Why do we get so-so horses representing animals that have been carefully bred? And not nearly enough foals in the band of mares. And Flicka as a sidebar.
Banner was a sorrel. Not a mahogany/black.
Stallions? I didn't see any stallions. There isn't a testicle in the lot. Stallions don't rear and whinny to herd their mares. They bellow and squeal and snake their heads along the ground. The ending horse fight (wild stallion battles rarely end in death) is disturbing when I stop to consider what they had to do to get those two geldings to fight so terribly. (and even in the book, the only reason Thunderhead wins despite being only a 3 year old, is the Albino must be nearly 20! Range stallions are past their prime by 8-10)
The book is an almost spiritual read. Real people and real horses and real hardships and near-spiritual bonding with horses. There are absolutely lyrical chapters from Thunderhead's point of view, as he roams and encounters the Albino for the first time and barely survives. How he learns. How he is trained. Matures. Wins.
With a strong mother, not a hand-wringer.
And don't get me going about "Green Grass of Wyoming" - the only thing that one had in common with the book is the title and Thunderhead stealing an expensive, imported English filly.
I am not sure I'd recommend this film to children today. It disturbed me as a child, especially the fight and death of horses.
Yet, if you allow for the moral and technical standards of the time, this 1945 movie must have been striking.
50 years later the film still has its moments and Beautiful Scenery. But why do we get Gus's girl instead of Ken's older brother, Howard? Gus didn't have a girl. Why do we get so-so horses representing animals that have been carefully bred? And not nearly enough foals in the band of mares. And Flicka as a sidebar.
Banner was a sorrel. Not a mahogany/black.
Stallions? I didn't see any stallions. There isn't a testicle in the lot. Stallions don't rear and whinny to herd their mares. They bellow and squeal and snake their heads along the ground. The ending horse fight (wild stallion battles rarely end in death) is disturbing when I stop to consider what they had to do to get those two geldings to fight so terribly. (and even in the book, the only reason Thunderhead wins despite being only a 3 year old, is the Albino must be nearly 20! Range stallions are past their prime by 8-10)
The book is an almost spiritual read. Real people and real horses and real hardships and near-spiritual bonding with horses. There are absolutely lyrical chapters from Thunderhead's point of view, as he roams and encounters the Albino for the first time and barely survives. How he learns. How he is trained. Matures. Wins.
With a strong mother, not a hand-wringer.
And don't get me going about "Green Grass of Wyoming" - the only thing that one had in common with the book is the title and Thunderhead stealing an expensive, imported English filly.
I am not sure I'd recommend this film to children today. It disturbed me as a child, especially the fight and death of horses.
Yet, if you allow for the moral and technical standards of the time, this 1945 movie must have been striking.
Filming a Technicolor movie back in the 1940s involved using an enormous, bulky camera, which proved cumbersome for its operators outside the studios. These huge cameras contained a beam splitter as well as three film canisters, each devoted to a primary color. The Technicolor company realized how difficult its cameras were to operate, especially on field locations. Technicolor decided to innovate an alternative camera, a far smaller, lighter and simpler one than its standard ones. Once developed, the first movie to fully shoot its feature film using Technicolor's 'Monopack' technology was March 1945's "Thunderhead: Son of Flicka." These more portable cameras using the monopack had one main drawback: they didn't produce as vibrant of a picture as its three-strip cameras.
20th Century Fox had plans to film its outdoor adventure movie, a sequel to its popular 1943 "My Friend Flicka," in Technicolor, facing the arduous task of lugging the massive camera to several locations throughout the West. Once the studio became aware of the new color monopack camera, it hopped on board to secure the new invention for "Thunderhead: Son of Flicka," starring Roddy McDowall, Preston Foster and Rita Johnson, This monopack technology had its beginnings in the mid-1930s when Technicolor collaborated with Eastman Kodak to research and develop a camera which could shoot on single strip color cinematic film stock. Initially Kodak tried to manufacture a 35mm movie film strip. Not only was it too expensive to produce, but the emulsion was uneven. The two companies decided to film in 16mm, and expand the thinner strip in Technicolor's lab to the projected 35mm width. By the early 1940s they were confident the monopack could deliver a decent color look, and was introduced in the production of 1943's "Lassie Come Home" for its outdoor scenes. "Thunderhead: Son of Flicka" took the technology further by filming the entire movie in and out of the studio by the monopack camera. Technicolor avoided claiming its new system used Kodachrome film, calling it instead "an experiment in monopack," or the "Monopack procedure" or more commonly "Technicolor Monopack." Easily transporting the new color camera similar in size to those regular black-and-white ones to the Oneonta Gorge in Oregon, Hollywood Park Racetrack, Utah's Zion National Park and Duck Creek, Nevada, among other places showed this was going to be the wave of the future in color photography.
Actor Roddy McDowall, 16, picks up where he left off in the first Flicka movie as Ken McLaughin, the son of horse breeder Rob McLaughlin (Preston Foster). Flicka gives birth to a white colt, who is sired by a neighboring racehorse. The rambunctious Thunderhead, a name given by Ken's mom, Nellie (Rita Johnson), because it reminds her of fluffy white clouds, is a confronted by the wild mustang stallion Albino. The aggressive Albino has been stealing other domesticated horses in nearby farms for his own enjoyment.
Thunderhead was an ideal horse to work with, according to McDowall, unlike Flicka in the earlier movie. That horse was ornery to be near, constantly stomping on Roddy's feet. Actor Preston Foster, as Ken's dad, was an accomplished music composer, who, as a big San Diego Padres baseball fan while living in nearby La Jolla, wrote the team's official song, "Let's Go Padres." "Thunderhead: Son of Flicka" was the second of three films adapted from author Mary O'Hara's trilogy on the horse Flicka. Her third book, 1946's 'Green Grass of Wyoming," was made into a 1948 film of the same name. But the 1945 Flicka sequel would always be remembered as the one whose first extensive use of the Technicolor Monopack pioneered a new era in Hollywood color movies.
20th Century Fox had plans to film its outdoor adventure movie, a sequel to its popular 1943 "My Friend Flicka," in Technicolor, facing the arduous task of lugging the massive camera to several locations throughout the West. Once the studio became aware of the new color monopack camera, it hopped on board to secure the new invention for "Thunderhead: Son of Flicka," starring Roddy McDowall, Preston Foster and Rita Johnson, This monopack technology had its beginnings in the mid-1930s when Technicolor collaborated with Eastman Kodak to research and develop a camera which could shoot on single strip color cinematic film stock. Initially Kodak tried to manufacture a 35mm movie film strip. Not only was it too expensive to produce, but the emulsion was uneven. The two companies decided to film in 16mm, and expand the thinner strip in Technicolor's lab to the projected 35mm width. By the early 1940s they were confident the monopack could deliver a decent color look, and was introduced in the production of 1943's "Lassie Come Home" for its outdoor scenes. "Thunderhead: Son of Flicka" took the technology further by filming the entire movie in and out of the studio by the monopack camera. Technicolor avoided claiming its new system used Kodachrome film, calling it instead "an experiment in monopack," or the "Monopack procedure" or more commonly "Technicolor Monopack." Easily transporting the new color camera similar in size to those regular black-and-white ones to the Oneonta Gorge in Oregon, Hollywood Park Racetrack, Utah's Zion National Park and Duck Creek, Nevada, among other places showed this was going to be the wave of the future in color photography.
Actor Roddy McDowall, 16, picks up where he left off in the first Flicka movie as Ken McLaughin, the son of horse breeder Rob McLaughlin (Preston Foster). Flicka gives birth to a white colt, who is sired by a neighboring racehorse. The rambunctious Thunderhead, a name given by Ken's mom, Nellie (Rita Johnson), because it reminds her of fluffy white clouds, is a confronted by the wild mustang stallion Albino. The aggressive Albino has been stealing other domesticated horses in nearby farms for his own enjoyment.
Thunderhead was an ideal horse to work with, according to McDowall, unlike Flicka in the earlier movie. That horse was ornery to be near, constantly stomping on Roddy's feet. Actor Preston Foster, as Ken's dad, was an accomplished music composer, who, as a big San Diego Padres baseball fan while living in nearby La Jolla, wrote the team's official song, "Let's Go Padres." "Thunderhead: Son of Flicka" was the second of three films adapted from author Mary O'Hara's trilogy on the horse Flicka. Her third book, 1946's 'Green Grass of Wyoming," was made into a 1948 film of the same name. But the 1945 Flicka sequel would always be remembered as the one whose first extensive use of the Technicolor Monopack pioneered a new era in Hollywood color movies.
10ccangel
Oh this is an awesome movie! The most beautiful white stallion you have ever seen! What an wonderful movie! Thunderhead runs the hills and captures your heart. The actors are wonderful too. Oh how i would like to buy this movie on dvd or vhs! PLEASE! Thanks! GOD BLESS! : )
Did you know
- TriviaRoddy McDowall really loved Thunderhead but he hated Flicka. He said she was mean and kept stepping on his foot.
- Goofs(At 1:12:30 and 1:12:37) The Albino's ear twitches when he is supposed to be dead.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Family Classics: Family Classics: Thunderhead - Son of Flicka (1962)
- How long is Thunderhead: Son of Flicka?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Thunderhead: Son of Flicka
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 18 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content