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IMDbPro

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

    6.928.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7sanjohnproductions

    Good souvenirs ...

    I watched this movie when I was really young. It has some powerful magic and beautiful cinematography. Really go and see it if you haven't seen it!
    9fertilecelluloid

    Extraordinarily beautiful!

    This is poetic, emotional, breathtaking film-making blessed with a truly inspiring Mark Isham score. The theme song, "10,000 Miles", is achingly beautiful and is first used with intuitive irony over the film's opening credit sequence.

    Anna Paquin is the little girl who, with her father, Jeff Daniels, "imprints" with a flock of young geese and leads them, via homemade aircraft, to a new home thousands of miles away.

    The flight sequences, which combine real flying with computer-assisted imagery over rivers, pastures and cityscapes, are flawless. They capture the awe and staggering thrill of flight without ever resorting to unnecessary, contrived stuntwork.

    Daniels, not a regular face on the silver screen these days, is natural and likable as Paquin's eccentric father while Paquin once again demonstrates what a brilliant talent she is.

    The narrative builds to an exciting conclusion as the film's environmental theme is amplified.

    Director Ballard, who also made the striking BLACK STALLION and the stark NEVER CRY WOLF, brings acute visual economy to every scene and never allows the film's underlying theme to become preachy.

    Caleb Deschanel, the film's cinematographer, gives us flawless images that frequently drop the jaw.

    A major achievement in a minor key.
    dcombs100

    A Story of Returning to Joy

    The greatest challenge any of us will ever face is how to regain the ability to reach for joy after the loss of a loved one. Especially, when that loss is abrupt and occurs at an age before one has developed the capacities to manage it. That is the over-arching and powerful theme that "Fly Away Home" manages to evoke so beautifully.

    It's difficult to pin-point which of the masterfully developed elements of filmmaking that make this movie such a joy to watch again and again. But, surely, it all comes down to the great story-telling ability of Mr. Carol Ballard. Everything is harnessed to tell the story (a basic element of drama surprisingly ignored these days in Hollywood) of a girl who loses her mother at a critical point in her life, and has to find a way to the rest of her life, while reeling from the trauma and uncertain of how to survive her grief.

    The discovery of an abandoned nest of Canadian geese eggs is the simple overlaying metaphor that takes us on her journey. The great difference between this movie and other movies of its type is that Mr. Ballard resists the temptation to explicate the transcendent story of Amy's emotional triumph over her loss and grief. Simply put, the story is about the geese, but it's really about Amy's recovery and reconnection with her future, with her life, though there isn't one line of dialogue explaining that to the viewer. It seeps out of the story through the masterful, chekovian performances of Anna Paquin as Amy and Jeff Daniels as her father. This theme is supported with such unerring consistency in the music (Mark Isham at his most sublime), the cinematography, editing, lighting, art direction and casting. All of the casting is just perfect. Especially in the sense that none of the actors ever seem to be pulling anything out of their "bag of tricks" or doing some bit you've seen them do before. The quality of the work is such that much of the dialogue in the movie seems spontaneous and almost ad libbed. The final sequence is a thing of sublime, subtly powerful beauty that is rarely seen in movies these days. A powerful, wordless climax. Something that happens so effortlessly, because the story that comes before has been told so completely and with such skill. I cry every time I watch it.

    Thank you, Carol Ballard, for this beautiful gift of compassion and belief.

    Note: Did Anna Paquin actually move from little girl to adolescent in the course of making this movie, or is it more of the master magicianry of Carol Ballard and his team?
    7drsnap

    Easygoing in a good way...

    This movie has something thats missing in a lot of other movies. It has a soul, and a belief in good.

    Its believable, beautiful and smooth. Its cast shows that they´re as good as any renowned "great" actor of the day, and the story is quite light...yet its something strangely moving about it.

    A daughter that looses her mother, which leads her to take care of doomed geese. And even though the cute-scale is quite high, the movie still holds you cause of its fine acting and soulful goodness.

    This is a great movie for all ages. Its nice shooted, really nice telled, and good acted.

    Its a given choice for the whole family. 9/10!

    Ps. The soundtrack is also very nice. Suttle, clean and memorable.
    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.

    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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    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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