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Ride a Wild Pony

Catalog Number
077
-
Primary Distributor (If not listed, select "OTHER")
Release Year
Country
VHS | SP | Slipcase
86 mins (NTSC)
N/A | N/A | N/A
N/A | N/A
Second Distributor
Ride a Wild Pony (1976)

Additional Information

Additional Information
A poor boy's dream, a defiant girl's hope, a wild pony's choice.

Poor boy, rich girl... A wild pony means freedom to both but can belong to only one.

All he asked was to run free...

Ride a Wild Pony, also known as Born to Run, is a 1975 Walt Disney Productions film directed by Don Chaffey adapted from the James Aldridge novel A Sporting Proposition.[2][

Set in a small Australian town between world wars, the film follows the battle between two children, Scott, a poor farm boy, and Josie, the handicapped daughter of a wealthy ranch owner, for ownership of a horse that both children love.[4] Scott requires a horse to ride seven miles to school today and his father buys an unbroken pony, which Scott names Taff. Josie yearns to ride again but, being crippled, must settle on the use of a cart and pony. Scott's pony disappears, while a pony is eventually selected for Josie from her father's herd. When Scott sees the horse, which Josie named Bo, performing in the pony and cart competition at the township fair, he recognizes it as his horse and attempts to take it away.[5] The ensuing quarrel affects both the children as well as dividing the town.[6] The children eventually become friends and, while the ownership issue is legally resolved, they agree on a way of sharing the pony between them.[4]

In 1976, The New York Times criticized the film as a "fundamentally uneventful and somewhat padded story",[6] while in 1987 in a review for the film's video release it wrote that the film "was well acted, by adults, youngsters and pony...a film that children - and their parents - should certainly enjoy."[10] Also in 1976, The Blade wrote that the film "combines an intelligent script, a generally excellent cast, and good production values in a film with broad appeal."[4] The Daily Collegian also praised the film, saying that it contained "a refreshing amount of realism, and an emotional subtelty that is unusual for a Disney film.

Release Date: July 16, 1976 from Disney

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