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Secretariat

Secretariat

  • Status: Released
  • 20-08-2010
  • Runtime: 123 min
  • Score: 7.4
  • Vote count: 598

Housewife and mother Penny Chenery agrees to take over her ailing father's Virginia-based Meadow Stables, despite her lack of horse-racing knowledge. Against all odds, Chenery - with the help of veteran trainer Lucien Laurin - manages to navigate the male-dominated business, ultimately fostering the first Triple Crown winner in 25 years.

Diane Lane

Penny Chenery

John Malkovich

Lucien Laurin

Scott Glenn

Chris Chenery

Dylan Walsh

Jack Tweedy

Fred Thompson

Bull Hancock

Margo Martindale

Miss Ham

Nelsan Ellis

Eddie Sweat

James Cromwell

Ogden Phipps

Otto Thorwarth

Ronnie Turcotte

Michael Harding

E.V. Benjamin

Richard Fullerton

Robert Kleburg

Tim Ware

John Galbreath

Nestor Serrano

Pancho Martin

Keith Austin

Laffit Pincay

Kevin Connolly

Bill Nack

Eric Lange

Andy Beyer

Drew Roy

Seth Hancock

Carissa Capobianco

Sarah Tweedy

AJ Michalka

Kate Tweedy

Sean Michael Cunningham

Chris Tweedy

Jacob Rhodes

John Tweedy

Dylan Baker

Hollis Chenery

Graham McTavish

Earl Jansen

Ken Strunk

Dr. Manuel Gilman

Wynn Reichert

Pastor

Audrey P. Scott

Penny, age 6

Joe Chrest

Sports Broadcaster

Andres Gomez

Quite decent story telling. Not too big pretensions and nice performance from a well chosen cast. The story is quite stereotypical but it is well done.

r96sk

I thoroughly enjoyed the performances of Diane Lane and John Malkovich, the film itself may not match those two but it still makes for a pleasant time. This is another sports drama from Disney and another film about horses, of which they have been a fair amount down the decades from the studio. It fails to reach the (very) high levels of 1976's <em>'The Littlest Horse Thieves'</em> and 1991's <em>'Wild Hearts Can't Be Broken'</em>. However, with that noted, <em>'Secretariat'</em> still produces a fine time. Lane and Malkovich are very good together, Lane particularly stands out. Margo Martindale is involved once more, playing a sweet and lovely character as she always does - she's perfect for those roles. Nice to see James Cromwell, also. The cinematography is solid, as is the pacing of events. It does feel a little light of serious story at times, but that's hard to avoid when you're dealing with something as interesting but repetitive as horse racing. In the end, it's a nice story about Secretariat and Penny Chenery.