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L'envolée sauvage

Original title: Fly Away Home
  • 1996
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
28K
YOUR RATING
Anna Paquin in L'envolée sauvage (1996)
Home Video Trailer from Columbia Tristar
Play trailer2:40
1 Video
30 Photos
Animal AdventureComing-of-AgeQuestAdventureDramaFamily

Amy moves to Ontario to live with her father after the death of her mother. Her father, an aviation expert, helps Amy lead a flock of orphaned geese south for the winters.Amy moves to Ontario to live with her father after the death of her mother. Her father, an aviation expert, helps Amy lead a flock of orphaned geese south for the winters.Amy moves to Ontario to live with her father after the death of her mother. Her father, an aviation expert, helps Amy lead a flock of orphaned geese south for the winters.

  • Director
    • Carroll Ballard
  • Writers
    • Bill Lishman
    • Robert Rodat
    • Vince McKewin
  • Stars
    • Jeff Daniels
    • Anna Paquin
    • Dana Delany
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    28K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Carroll Ballard
    • Writers
      • Bill Lishman
      • Robert Rodat
      • Vince McKewin
    • Stars
      • Jeff Daniels
      • Anna Paquin
      • Dana Delany
    • 114User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 5 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Fly Away Home
    Trailer 2:40
    Fly Away Home

    Photos30

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    + 24
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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Jeff Daniels
    Jeff Daniels
    • Thomas Alden
    Anna Paquin
    Anna Paquin
    • Amy Alden
    Dana Delany
    Dana Delany
    • Susan Barnes
    Terry Kinney
    Terry Kinney
    • David Alden
    Holter Graham
    Holter Graham
    • Barry Strickland
    Jeremy Ratchford
    Jeremy Ratchford
    • Glen Seifert
    Deborah Verginella
    • Amy's Mother
    Michael J. Reynolds
    Michael J. Reynolds
    • General
    David Hemblen
    David Hemblen
    • Dr. Killian
    Ken James
    • Developer
    Nora Ballard
    • Jackie
    Sarena Paton
    • Laura
    Carmen Lishman
    • Older Girl
    Christi Hill
    • Older Girl
    Judith Orban
    • Teacher
    Jeff Braunstein
    • Chairman
    John Friesen
    • Smalltown Businessman
    Chris Benson
    • Farmer
    • Director
      • Carroll Ballard
    • Writers
      • Bill Lishman
      • Robert Rodat
      • Vince McKewin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews114

    6.928.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8thenewcrossleys

    Consistently drives grown men (& women) to tears

    A family film .. yes but certainly one that can be watched and watched again without the need for a licensing child. Jeff Daniels is superb as an eccentric father who takes on board his daughter after his estranged wife's death in a car accident. A strong supporting cast (including geese) are driven to support Amy's desire to assist a bunch of orphaned geese to maintain a wild existence. This involves teaching the geese to fly and leading them South by air. This journey for both the daughter coping with grief after the loss of her mother, the father in discovering his daughter once more and the geese in finding a new home for the Winter adds up to .. well tears and more tears.

    Before you write this film off as "fantasy" take the time to watch the BBC's Life of Birds final part. There you meet a remarkable farmer from the US who is using a microlite to aid a few of the last remaining Whooping Cranes to re-establish migratory patterns.

    In the UK the site of skeins of wild geese migrating in Winter form their Summer homes in Iceland and the Arctic circle is one of the last great wildlife dramas left on this small island. The views in Fly away Home of Amy's geese as they move in to join the hundreds of wild geese powering South capture this majesty. This story of a group of people who care about and assist this natural pattern may help reinforce some of the awe that we should all feel when confronted with these epic and annual journeys.
    sctmplr-1

    Beautiful Cinematography

    I got sucked into a movie on the satellite dish the other day, 'Fly Away Home.' It's a story about a young motherless girl (Amy) who rescues some wild goose eggs and basically becomes their mother. The story evolves as the goslings grow into young adult birds ready to fly south. Since they never had parents the geese haven't learned to fly. The girl's dad thinks he can get them to fly by following him in his ultra-light. But they will only follow Amy. So dad teaches her to fly. Soon the geese are flying. Next, dad and Amy hatch a plot to fly south and have the geese follow them. We know this actually happened when 2 scientists did something similar.

    One of the reasons I was sucked into this wonderful family movie was the photography. It is National Geographic quality. In fact I was so impressed with the cinematography that I had to look up who did it: Caleb Deschanel. The setting, a farm in Southern Ontario, allowed him to become intimate with the geese and the natural setting. Another reason I couldn't stop watching the movie was the stunning performance by Anna Paquin, the 16-year old girl who played Amy. I remembered her from the movie, 'Piano.' She played Flora, the daughter of Holly Hunter. I'm sure they picked Paquin to do that part because of her speaking ability. Holly Hunter played the part of Ada, a woman who couldn't talk. She communicated with sign language through her daughter. Paquin was so good in her part that she won the Oscar, quite a feat for an 11-year old.

    The story, 'Fly Away Home' is touching because she's not the kind of Hollywood-trained child actor you find in most movies. A surprising thing happened as I watched Amy and her geese. I could sense a startling serenity from her as the bond had developed between them. I wondered how she could manage that. She was only a 16-year old actress then but she conveyed a mothering instinct that goes back to the ageless beginnings of life on this planet. When the goslings were following her around, much of the photography was from ground level. Later when they were all flying, the photography was right there in the flying formation. You were seeing the birds, in flight, right next to you. The beauty of motion was unbelievable. I thought, 'How could anyone shoot these creatures?' There is beauty in seeing them fly. There is beauty in seeing them in their habitat. But the overwhelming beauty is in their living. They deserved that life. It made me think of this sad planet and the billions of creatures that have died because of the human race. Here was a story that went against the slaughter. When Amy and her birds arrived at their destination in Chesapeake Bay I had misty eyes.

    So I'm a soft touch.
    7spirit11

    An incredibly sweet story

    WARNING: This review may reveal portions of the movie plot.

    If you want to just lose yourself in a story that is sweet and uplifting, then this is the movie for you. I was surprised at how efficiently this movie drew me in, but then again I'm a big softie at heart. I started watching this movie late one night and didn't want to stop -- so I didn't!

    The movie concerns a young girl who goes to live with her father after her mother is killed in a car accident. Dad and Mom divorced many years before and live on opposite sides of the world -- Canada and New Zealand -- so she doesn't know Dad very well.

    Jeff Bridges plays the father in this film and does it incredibly well. He's an artist who is just a little bit quirky, a big believer in following your dreams, and desperately trying to capture the love for his daughter that he regrets having lost in the divorce years before. Anna Paquin as his 13-year old daughter is wonderful -- how do young kids act so well??? -- as she learns to grieve for her mother, find a new life in a new country, and love and trust a father whom she has barely known most of her life.

    The supporting cast shines as well, in most cases. Most notably is Terry Kinney as Daniels brother and the young girls uncle. He's the kind of uncle everyone wants to have around, although when he falls asleep while babysitting and Paquin's character disappears, he doesn't seem very responsible. He becomes a bit of a scene stealer though as the movie progresses. He has one of the best lines in the film when he tries to convince a U.S. border-patrol agent that he needs dozens of gallons of gas to go camping for his portable generator to run his blender and TV. "Nothing like camping in the middle of no where with your VCR, a good movie, and a pina colada."

    Dana Delany (of TV's "China Beach" fame) plays Daniels sometimes live-in girlfriend and seems to be the only actor who doesn't really stretch in this part. I don't believe this is Delany's fault, however. This story is primarily about the father-daughter relationship, and Delany's part suffers as a result. Most scenes are supportive and don't really give her a chance to shine.

    The story is well written with a combination of genuine emotion, without becoming overly sappy. Yes, the film is sweet, but not sickeningly so. When the credits began to roll at the end of this movie, the first thing I thought of way, "How could this have gotten a PG rating?" I *literally* heard one four-letter word in the entire film, and that is said under the breath so that I wasn't even sure I heard it. There is one reference to sex outside marriage, and a car accident at the beginning of the film. That's it. Parents, you can show this to young children without any real concern. My suggestion: Watch the first 5 minutes of the film and if you decide your children can handle the opening sequence of a car crash, then there probably is nothing else in the film that should be a problem (in my opinion!)
    purvesgrundy

    Beautifully Delicate

    Following Toy Story comes Fly Away Home, another string to the increasingly large bow of children's films that adults can also enjoy. The story follows Amy, a 13-year-old New Zealand girl who is forced to live with her estranged father in Canada following a car crash that kills her mother. Amy becomes increasingly withdrawn and upset until she finds a collection of similarly orphaned goslings that she takes care of, nurturing them until they are ready to migrate to the southern United States.

    The film could easily have fallen into the sappy ‘family film' category. However, it never lets itself, choosing to concentrate more on characters than moments. Amy's character, played with breathtaking maturity by Anna Paquin, is better developed and more complex than characters in most films aimed at adults. The supporting cast also flesh out their strong characters to make the whole film much more believable.

    The cinematography is beautiful, the dusky-autumnal scenes are captured in an explosion of reds and yellows and oranges that seem to wash over you time and time again, and the final flight sequence is a wonderful closing to an incredibly refreshing film.
    7SnoopyStyle

    good family movie

    Amy Alden (Anna Paquin) survives a car crash where her mother is killed. She leaves New Zealand to live with her father Thomas (Jeff Daniels) in his ramshackle house in Ontario, Canada. She has no memories of her Canadian home and feels isolated. He's an eccentric inventor artist who flies his homemade glider. Susan Barnes (Dana Delany) is his girlfriend. After a land developer tears down some trees, Amy finds an abandoned nest of goose eggs. She raises the chicks but when the time comes, she has to teach them to fly south.

    This is a fine family movie. Anna Paquin is adorable and so are the chicks. The story is gentle feel good. Jeff Daniels is great as the eccentric dad. There is a real free feeling that comes from watching people run around with these geese. There is a minor drama with a wildlife officer and a main one with a land developer. In the end, the drama isn't too high but it's good for the whole family.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the film, Amy (played by Anna Paquin) was raised in New Zealand and then moved to Canada after her mother's death. In real life, Anna Paquin was born in Canada and raised in New Zealand.
    • Goofs
      After Amy bashes the game warden with the popcorn bowl, Susan pulls one of the goslings from his hand. She is still holding it when Amy gathers up all the other goslings and runs into the bathroom with them.
    • Quotes

      Amy Alden: Mama to Papa. That was so cool!

      Thomas Alden: Yeah, great. I just made a criminal out of my own daughter. Now we'll both do time behind bars.

      Amy Alden: Dad, stop being so dramatic.

      Thomas Alden: Now, look, this is just the beginning, Amy. We've got to make 120 nautical miles by sundown, fly across Lake Ontario, cross an international boundary without a permit carrying stolen goods, without filing a flight plan, without any official approval, four days behind schedule. We're on the edge, my dear.

    • Crazy credits
      Amy's birds return the following year to Amy's surprise as she wakes up one morning.
    • Alternate versions
      The phrase "holy sh*t" has been restored from US Versions of 2001 re-release.
    • Connections
      Featured in HBO First Look: 'Fly Away Home': Leading the Flock (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      10,000 Miles
      Produced by Mark Isham, John Jennings, and Mary Chapin Carpenter

      Performed by Mary Chapin Carpenter

      Courtesy of Columbia Records

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    FAQ21

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    • Is this movie based on a book?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 7, 1997 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Volando a casa
    • Filming locations
      • Sandbanks Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Sandollar Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $22,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $25,143,818
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,708,044
      • Sep 15, 1996
    • Gross worldwide
      • $25,143,818
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 47m(107 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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