Ein wilder Hengst wird von Menschen gefangen genommen, und während seiner Freiheitskämpfe weigert sich der Hengst, die Hoffnung aufzugeben, eines Tages zu seiner Herde heimkehren zu können.Ein wilder Hengst wird von Menschen gefangen genommen, und während seiner Freiheitskämpfe weigert sich der Hengst, die Hoffnung aufzugeben, eines Tages zu seiner Herde heimkehren zu können.Ein wilder Hengst wird von Menschen gefangen genommen, und während seiner Freiheitskämpfe weigert sich der Hengst, die Hoffnung aufzugeben, eines Tages zu seiner Herde heimkehren zu können.
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 10 Gewinne & 22 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Spirit
- (Synchronisation)
- The Colonel
- (Synchronisation)
- Little Creek
- (Synchronisation)
- Sgt. Adams
- (Synchronisation)
- Murphy
- (Synchronisation)
- …
- Soldier
- (Synchronisation)
- Bill
- (Synchronisation)
- Joe
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Matthew Levin)
- Jake
- (Synchronisation)
- Roy
- (Synchronisation)
- Little Indian Girl
- (Synchronisation)
- Little Creek's Friend
- (Synchronisation)
- Little Creek's Friend
- (Synchronisation)
- Train Pull Foreman
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Don Fullilove)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesThe model for Spirit was a 3-year-old Kiger stallion named Donner. He was bought from a rancher for $50,000 (considered a high price). Kiger Stallions are noteworthy because they are a wild breed with traits originating back to the breeds brought over by the Spaniards in the 16th and 17th centuries. Donner was most likely chosen so that DreamWorks Animation could base Spirit on a horse most like what a wild horse in the 18th century might have looked like.
- PatzerThe Lakota camp had a pen for their horses. Lakota would not have had pens, their horses would've run in a herd that was attended to by the teens of the tribe.
- Zitate
[Closing Narration before the Ending Song]
Spirit: I had been waiting so long to run free, but that good-bye was harder than I ever imagined. I'll never forget that boy...
[Spirit neighs onscreen]
Spirit: and how we won back our freedom together.
[Spirit neighing onscreen]
Little Creek: [whooping] Whoo-oooo, oooo-oooo, oooo-oooo!
- Crazy CreditsThere are no opening credits (for music composer, producers, screenplay and directors, etc.) after the title of the film, "Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron", appears. However, in the 2010s it's perfectly normal for major films to not have opening credits.
- Alternative VersionenThe Hulu print adds the 2013 Universal Pictures logo.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Troldspejlet: Folge #27.2 (2002)
- SoundtracksHere I Am
Written by Bryan Adams, Gretchen Peters, Hans Zimmer
Produced by Gavin Greenaway and Bryan Adams
Performed by Bryan Adams (uncredited)
The movie has three selling points for people who are appalled at how childish and inane animated features in the U.S. have been over the last decade or so:
1) It's got a serious story. 2) The horses don't talk. 3) The horses don't sing.
The latter two functions are served by Spirit's first-person narration, voiced by Matt Damon and told in the past tense as a reminiscence, and several songs on the soundtrack written and performed by Bryan Adams. Neither of these elements were particularly necessary and the movie would have been better without them, although they aren't fatal. Hans Zimmer's excellent music score does a far more effective job in conveying, in dramatic and emotional terms, what the songs belabor. But, thankfully, aside from Damon, there are no other celebrity voices.
The other big selling point is the artwork. The background art and western landscapes are stunning and offer a mix of painted scenes and computer-created scenery, although everything seems computer enhanced in one way or another. Most importantly, the film gives us a chance to savor the backgrounds. The characters don't zip around in constant frenetic motion the way they do in Disney movies. Although there are several chase scenes, the characters are just as likely to pause and connect with each other in movements reflecting naturalistic behavior. There are moments of gentleness, tenderness, curiosity, and discovery, so we get to see the space the characters are in and get to connect with it ourselves. There's a real palpable sense of environment and geography, of time and place, something rarely found in American animated features.
The character design is also well-done. The human characters all have solid, expressive, recognizable faces, strongly differentiated from each other. The horses are well designed also, looking like horses, but anthropomorphised enough to give them recognizable emotional responses. No character, human or animal, is exaggerated for cartoon effect.
I normally have problems with digital animation and computer created imagery and SPIRIT is, for the most part, computer created, although it replicates the look of traditional 2-D animation. Still, if this is the wave of the future, then SPIRIT shows us how it should be done. This is digital animation at the best I've ever seen it (including the Japanese anime features I've seen in the last few years). And combined with a good story and clean concept that doesn't patronize its audience, it's created what I think is the finest American animated feature since BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (1991). If there is any significant flaw in SPIRIT, aside from the songs, it's that the story falls short of greatness, undercut by the lack of a sufficiently emotional payoff. Still, it's a better story than any I've seen in an American animated production since at least THE LION KING. Some viewers may quibble about the politically correct aspects of the story (cavalry=bad, Indians=good), but there is a moment near the end that balances things out in an intelligent, dramatic way.
SPIRIT may suffer at the boxoffice because it doesn't have the all-important lowest-common-denominator touches that have so cheapened the animated genre but attracted audiences looking for easy laughs (e.g. celebrity voices doing hyperactive genies, show-tune-singing meerkats and jive-talking jackasses). But it should give a measure of hope to that small, passionate segment of the audience that cares about animation as a medium capable in its own right of great storytelling and cinematic artistry.
- BrianDanaCamp
- 17. Mai 2002
- Permalink
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 80.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 73.280.117 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 17.770.036 $
- 26. Mai 2002
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 122.563.539 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 23 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.39 : 1