Flipper Movie Review
Flipper Review

"Flipper" Overview

Rating: G
1963
Cast and Crew
Director : James B. ClarkProducer : Ivan Tors
Screenwiter : Ricou Browning,Jack Cowden
Starring : Chuck Connors,Luke Halpin,Connie Scott,Kathleen McGuire
Sit your kids down in front of Flipper, and they may not know what hit them.
This Kennedy-era classic has everything today’s overstimulated rugrats never
get to see anymore: real kids, real parents, and real animals having exciting
adventures in a beautiful and interesting setting.
The story couldn’t be simpler: Boy meets dolphin, boy loses dolphin, boy gets
dolphin back. Twelve-year-old Sandy Ricks (Luke Halpin) lives with his
fisherman father (Chuck Connors) and housewife mother (Kathleen McGuire) in a
tumbledown oceanside cabin in the Florida keys. A water rat since birth, Sandy
is always taking off on afternoon skin dives that are beautifully photographed
by the same underwater experts responsible for Lloyd Bridges’ Sea Hunt TV show.
One day Sandy comes across a dolphin that’s been injured by a harpoon. With the
help of his parents, Sandy nurses the animal back to health and names him
Flipper. Despite Dad’s warnings not to get too attached, Sandy and Flipper
become best friends and spend long sunny days swimming together and putting on
cute shows for the local kids.
But then the inevitable: Dad demands that Sandy return Flipper to the wild, and
who’s gonna argue with Chuck Connors when he gets that stern look on his face?
Sandy is crushed, and even his incipient pre-adolescent romance with a cutie
from down the beach (Connie Scott) isn’t much solace.
It takes a truly scary hurricane to bring boy and dolphin together again. Like
Lassie before him, Flipper is a born hero, always showing up just in time to
save the day. Everything works out just fine, and a chorus of children’s voices
rises to tell us “They call him Flipper, Flipper, faster than lightning, no one
you see, is smarter than he.”
For a children’s movie released when Disney’s family-friendly film factory was
cranking out sugary Hayley Mills movies every six months, Flipper is
refreshingly earthy. The Ricks aren’t starving, but they sure ain’t rich, and
the beach kids have a touch of Little Rascals scruffiness about them. Halpin is
a natural, and he would grow up to be a teen idol as Flipper came around again
in a sequel. Later, the busy dolphin was asked to perform weekly heroics in a
TV version in which the mother was killed off, a smart alecky brother was
added, and Connors was replaced by a less terrifying father.
Forty years on, Flipper still has what it takes to entertain today’s jaded kids
— at least the younger ones — as successfully as it entertained their parents.
It’s a sunny windswept antidote to endless helpings of frantic Japanimation.
One other thing: skip the 1996 remake starring a young and wide-eyed Elijah
Wood. It stinks like low tide.
And faster than a shotgun.
Reviewer: Don Willmott



