International Velvet (film): Difference between revisions
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'''International Velvet''' is the touching story of a girl, Sarah Brown, who is orphaned when her parents are killed in a car crash. She is sent to [[England]] to live with her aunt, Velvet Brown. When Velvet was a similar age as Sarah, she entered the [[Grand National]] and won, however getting disqualified as she was too young and a woman. The horse Velvet rode on that occasion was called '''The Pie'''. The horse was retired to a stud, and after much deliberation, Sarah and aunt Velvet buy the last offspring of The Pie and aptly name it '''Arizona Pie''', combining the name of the stallion, and the state in America Sarah was originally from. Sarah lives up to her dream and enters the [[Olympic Games|Olympic]] [[Three Day Event]] helping [[Great Britain]] win the team competition. She falls in love with an American Competitor, and moves back to America with him. At the conclusion of the film, she sends her aunt Velvet her Olympic medal, saying she deserved it. |
'''International Velvet''' is the touching story of a girl, Sarah Brown, who is orphaned when her parents are killed in a car crash. She is sent to [[England]] to live with her aunt, Velvet Brown. When Velvet was a similar age as Sarah, she entered the [[Grand National]] and won, however getting disqualified as she was too young and a woman. The horse Velvet rode on that occasion was called '''The Pie'''. The horse was retired to a stud, and after much deliberation, Sarah and aunt Velvet buy the last offspring of The Pie and aptly name it '''Arizona Pie''', combining the name of the stallion, and the state in America Sarah was originally from. Sarah lives up to her dream and enters the [[Olympic Games|Olympic]] [[Three Day Event]] helping [[Great Britain]] win the team competition. She falls in love with an American Competitor, and moves back to America with him. At the conclusion of the film, she sends her aunt Velvet her Olympic medal, saying she deserved it. |
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==Locations== |
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*[http://www.flete.co.uk/ Flete Estate], [[Mothecombe]], [[Devon]]. |
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==Trivia== |
==Trivia== |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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*[[Olympic films]] |
*[[Olympic films]] |
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{{1970s-drama-film-stub}} |
{{1970s-drama-film-stub}} |
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[[Category:1978 films]] |
[[Category:1978 films]] |
Revision as of 12:45, 1 June 2007
International Velvet | |
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File:International Velvet Film.jpg | |
Directed by | Bryan Forbes |
Written by | Bryan Forbes Enid Bagnold (book) |
Produced by | Bryan Forbes |
Starring | Tatum O'Neal Nanette Newman Anthony Hopkins Christopher Plummer Jeffrey Byron Sarah Bullen Richard Warwick |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Running time | 127 min. |
Language | English |
International Velvet is the name of a 1978 film. It was the sequel to the 1944 classic, National Velvet.
Plot introduction
International Velvet is the touching story of a girl, Sarah Brown, who is orphaned when her parents are killed in a car crash. She is sent to England to live with her aunt, Velvet Brown. When Velvet was a similar age as Sarah, she entered the Grand National and won, however getting disqualified as she was too young and a woman. The horse Velvet rode on that occasion was called The Pie. The horse was retired to a stud, and after much deliberation, Sarah and aunt Velvet buy the last offspring of The Pie and aptly name it Arizona Pie, combining the name of the stallion, and the state in America Sarah was originally from. Sarah lives up to her dream and enters the Olympic Three Day Event helping Great Britain win the team competition. She falls in love with an American Competitor, and moves back to America with him. At the conclusion of the film, she sends her aunt Velvet her Olympic medal, saying she deserved it.
Locations
Trivia
- International Velvet shares none of the stars with the original film.
- The Director Bryan Forbes cast his wife Nanette Newman in the role of Velvet Brown, over Elizabeth Taylor, who played her in the original film.
- Somehow The Pie, who was a chestnut gelding with white socks and a big blaze in the original film, becomes a dark bay stallion with no white at all in the sequel.
See also