Racing Stripes Movie Review
Racing Stripes Review

"Racing Stripes" Overview

Rating: PG
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Frederik Du ChauProducer : Lloyd Phillips,Edward McDonnell,Andrew Kosove,Broderick Johnson
Screenwiter : David Schmidt
Starring : Bruce Greenwood,Hayden Panettiere,Wendie Malick,Frankie Muniz,Dustin Hoffman,Whoopi Goldberg,Joe Pantoliano,David Spade,Steve Harvey
God bless Hollywood’s family film genre. Where else could Malcolm in the Middle
star Frankie Muniz receive top-billing over Oscar winners Dustin Hoffman and
Whoopi Goldberg? And where else could squeaky-clean pop singer Mandy Moore
share screen credits with gangster rap sensation Snoop Dogg?
These talents, of course, provide voices to an array of talking animals in the
live action heartwarmer Racing Stripes, a sort of stripy Seabiscuit about an
orphaned zebra with a horse’s heart for racing. The misled mare, aptly
nicknamed Stripes, wants desperately to compete with rival horses at the
Kentucky Open – the Bluegrass State’s natural landscapes contributing an
exquisite backdrop to the film’s conventional action. Along the way, the zebra
is coached by a widowed father (Bruce Greenwood), his dedicated daughter
(Hayden Panettiere), and a stable of talking animals including a Shetland pony
(Hoffman), a goat (Goldberg), a rooster (Jeff Foxworthy), and two
manure-craving flies named Buzz (Steve Harvey) and Scuzz (David Spade).
Stripes wedges valuable lessons in a pleasing package. The film receives
instant bonus points for employing actual animals and avoiding animation,
arguably an easier alternative. The horses on parade are magnificent beasts,
which director Frederik Du Chau impressively corrals and choreographs for
required scenes. When Du Chau needs his horses to perform a difficult task,
like slide through the mud, he relies on sketchy CGI.
Comparisons to Chris Noonan’s Babe are inevitable, with chatty farm animals
helping Stripes figure out his true identity. The underdog formula remains at
play, though there’s sincere humor throughout. We visit the Blue Moon Races, a
creative proving-ground sequence modeled after The Fast and the Furious street
contests (now 2 Horse, 2 Furious, perhaps?). Joe Pantoliano even gets
consistent laughs as a Mafioso pelican, a wise guy – he’s no stool pigeon –
bringing big-city toughness to the country.
Other script elements suffer broad strokes. The bad people (and bad horses, for
that matter) are unbearably mean. Wendie Malick’s character is so wicked that
the actress should change her last name to “Malice.” She’s the Cruella De Vil
of the derby, and Malick plays her as despicable as possible. Buzz and Scuzz,
meanwhile, are notable computer-generated creations that move about with
impressive precision. Too bad Spade and Harvey’s improvised jokes stink worse
than the manure on which these misfits perch.
Warner Bros. is doing Racing Stripes a decent-sized disservice by unleashing it
into the typically cruel cinematic wastelands of mid-January. Lesser movies
have died out there, competing against winter weather and the usual onslaught
of Academy Award-worthy contenders that roll out to regional theaters at the
start of each new year.
The suspicious release date might lead you to believe it stinks, but that isn’t
the case. It’s simply by-the-numbers family entertainment. The root story stays
sweet, and the human protagonists have real choices to make, real issues to
settle. It’s interesting that back stories and attitudes make the other animals
in the barn far more interesting than Stripes, who gets hung up on the fact
that he wants to be a race horse. Potential sequels might do well by following
up on the supporting players, so long as they aren’t named Buzz and Scuzz.
The DVD offers an alternate ending, outtakes, deleted scenes, commentary track,
and plenty of making-of docs.
Fruit Stripes, good gum.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





