Asides

Something to watch tonight: Thursday 22 February

By February 22, 2024No Comments

Secretariat (Wallace, 2010)

Still from the 2010 film Secretariat

Thursdays are always busy watch­ing the week’s new releases so the updates tend to be short and sweet.

Today I want to draw your atten­tion to one of my unsung favour­ites, a film about a racehorse:

Secretariat was a race­horse – a very suc­cess­ful race­horse. In 1973 it was the first horse for 25 years to win the Triple Crown (the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness and the Belmont) and is widely acknow­ledged to be the finest Thoroughbred that ever lived. I know next to noth­ing about racing – and could care even less – and yet I watched Randall Wallace’s biop­ic of the horse with tears in my eyes from start to fin­ish. I haven’t been milked like that since The Pursuit of Happyness back in 2007 and frankly Secretariat had no right to do that to me. I mean, it’s all been seen before and it’s cer­tainly not as if you don’t already know what’s going to hap­pen. And yet… and yet… I adored it.

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It’s the exe­cu­tion that sets Secretariat head and shoulders above oth­er rags-to-riches, redemp­tion and triumph-over-adversity stor­ies. There’s not even that much adversity to over­come. Secretariat was born into a vir­tu­ally bank­rupt Virginia stable in 1969. The toss of a coin decided his fate and every­one thought own­er Penny Chenery (Diane Lane) had drawn a dud. His lin­eage sug­ges­ted he would have fast pace but no stay­ing power – Chenery thought otherwise.

But to prove her instincts about the horse were cor­rect she had to find a train­er (delight­ful John Malkovich) and a jockey (real life pro­fes­sion­al Otto Thorwarth) and over­come the res­ist­ance of her own family.

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After Secretariat died in 1989 vets dis­covered that (like Phar Lap) his heart was twice as big as oth­er horses and that’s what gave him his remark­able stay­ing power. I could say the same about Secretariat the film, too – it’s got a heart twice as big as your aver­age film.

I loved this so much I even­tu­ally bought myself a copy.

Other films reviewed in that February 2011 Capital Times review include a biop­ic about the French sing­er Serge Gainsbourg and a pre­view of that year’s French Film Festival. The high­lighted titles (Tournée – “ter­rif­ic”, Yves Saint-Laurent doco L’Amour Fou, Hands Up and The Names of Love) are all good films and all mostly forgotten.


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Where to watch Secretariat

Worldwide (at least in ter­rit­or­ies that have Disney+): Streaming on Disney+


Further reading

One of my cli­ents is the book­shop point-of-sale and web­site pro­vider Circle and I write pro­files of their cus­tom­ers for the Circle website.

Here’s a lovely book­shop in the Blue moun­tains of New South Wales that you should vis­it if you are ever out that way.

If you, or someone you know, needs some writ­ing, edit­ing or oth­er con­tent pro­duced for any reas­on, please get in touch. There are some spaces on the dance card and new cli­ents are always welcome.