Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA rodeo rider decides to quit his line of work after a serious injury, but when he visits his family and finds out that his dad is not well, he'll have to risk it one more time.A rodeo rider decides to quit his line of work after a serious injury, but when he visits his family and finds out that his dad is not well, he'll have to risk it one more time.A rodeo rider decides to quit his line of work after a serious injury, but when he visits his family and finds out that his dad is not well, he'll have to risk it one more time.
- Prix
- 1 nomination au total
Cynthia Mackey
- Ambulance Attendant
- (as Cynthia H. Mackey)
Bill Clymer
- Rodeo Announcer
- (voice)
Avis en vedette
H D Dalton (Scott Glenn) is a former rodeo champion with his career ruined by a bull that gored him. He returns in his hometown in Oklahoma only to discover that his father is in a nursing home, his sister is now a widow and the farm is now abandoned. After returning his dad in the farm, H D discovers that the ranch would be sold unless he obtains 100,000 $ after participating in a rodeo and ride a bull for 32 seconds. So H D has a gruesome training for winning the rodeo and save his ranch and dad.
While this is now an obscure movie available only on YouTube, it's still great. Scott Glenn gives a great performance as a former rodeo star that tries to win a bull riding context despite his past scars, and succedds. The other cast members (Clarence Williams III, Ben Johnson and Mickey Rooney) are very entertaining and the movie itself is inspiring and gives the message of never giving up on your past passions despite injuries or thoughts of the other people, I nearly cried towards the end when H D managed to ride the bull for 32 seconds.
If you stumble on this movie during a YouTube search, don't miss it because it's one of those films that goes for the say... they don't make 'em like this anymore!
While this is now an obscure movie available only on YouTube, it's still great. Scott Glenn gives a great performance as a former rodeo star that tries to win a bull riding context despite his past scars, and succedds. The other cast members (Clarence Williams III, Ben Johnson and Mickey Rooney) are very entertaining and the movie itself is inspiring and gives the message of never giving up on your past passions despite injuries or thoughts of the other people, I nearly cried towards the end when H D managed to ride the bull for 32 seconds.
If you stumble on this movie during a YouTube search, don't miss it because it's one of those films that goes for the say... they don't make 'em like this anymore!
Here's a modern Western gem from 1991 that's never been released on DVD.
Scott Glenn plays an injured ex-rodeo rider who returns home a Prodigal Son after years away.
The film follows his complicated relationships with his ex-girlfriend (Kate Capshaw), selfish wealthy brother (a surprisingly excellent Gary Busey playing against type), and aging father, a retired rodeo rider with dementia (real-life champion rodeo cowboy Ben Johnson in a touching performance).
As did many underdog movies of the era, the film awkwardly turns "Rocky"-like toward the end, when Scott Glenn's character mounts his rodeo steed once more for a chance at enough money to keep dad out of the nursing home.
And the end is jarringly abrupt, leaving several plot lines unresolved and questions unanswered.
But those are minor quibbles, when the rest of the movie is just pure joy, watching the characteristically taciturn Glenn navigate from one relationship to the other.
And the movie is peppered with old Western stars like Dub Taylor, to remind you that despite the soap opera drama, this here's a rodeo show at heart.
Scott Glenn plays an injured ex-rodeo rider who returns home a Prodigal Son after years away.
The film follows his complicated relationships with his ex-girlfriend (Kate Capshaw), selfish wealthy brother (a surprisingly excellent Gary Busey playing against type), and aging father, a retired rodeo rider with dementia (real-life champion rodeo cowboy Ben Johnson in a touching performance).
As did many underdog movies of the era, the film awkwardly turns "Rocky"-like toward the end, when Scott Glenn's character mounts his rodeo steed once more for a chance at enough money to keep dad out of the nursing home.
And the end is jarringly abrupt, leaving several plot lines unresolved and questions unanswered.
But those are minor quibbles, when the rest of the movie is just pure joy, watching the characteristically taciturn Glenn navigate from one relationship to the other.
And the movie is peppered with old Western stars like Dub Taylor, to remind you that despite the soap opera drama, this here's a rodeo show at heart.
I am always looking for movies set in Texas/Oklahoma, etc. in modern times (post-cowboy days). I expected this one to be little corny, but I was not prepared for just how bad it was. Even though it had some decent actors, they all did a terrible job or were given a terrible script and direction in this flick. Ben Johnson is one of my all-time favorite actors. Compare this to "The Last Picture Show" and he comes off as a crude redneck with emotions that I'd expect in a kids movie. Characters changed moods and attitudes from one sentence to the next. The arguments were totally irrational and disconnected. Unless you're desperate to watch bull riding and wranglers, don't waste your time with this pitiful movie.
I cannot count the number of movies that I have seen with Scott Glen. But not one of them, with maybe the exception of the role of Alan Shepard in The Right Stuff has stuck with me. I saw him the other night in what I though was an outstanding performance, so I thought I would take another look. I was not disappointed.
Playing a role that many of us have been in, a man with a difficult relationship with his father, Glen (H.D.) really showed the right stuff in this film. he left his father, his high school sweetheart, and all responsibility to do his thing. Now, he is back trying to see if he truly is all hat and no cattle as his girlfriend Jolie (Kate Capshaw) accuses him of being. Complicating the problem is a sister (Tess Harper) that was left with all the responsibility when he left. H.D. has to get it all together to save his father and his relationship with Jolie.
Scott Glen has the right stuff and I will be revisiting a lot of films that I've seen.
Playing a role that many of us have been in, a man with a difficult relationship with his father, Glen (H.D.) really showed the right stuff in this film. he left his father, his high school sweetheart, and all responsibility to do his thing. Now, he is back trying to see if he truly is all hat and no cattle as his girlfriend Jolie (Kate Capshaw) accuses him of being. Complicating the problem is a sister (Tess Harper) that was left with all the responsibility when he left. H.D. has to get it all together to save his father and his relationship with Jolie.
Scott Glen has the right stuff and I will be revisiting a lot of films that I've seen.
There isn't much to say about this rodeo 'Rocky' rip-off. In a nutshell: hard-drinkin', slow-talking', two-fisted bronco buster Scott Glenn has to ride the meanest bull on Earth to win the money needed to keep his ailing father out of a nursing home, and so forth and so on. The formula is copied right down to the inspirational training montage and sappy, uplifting music score, and there's even a little cowboy Zen philosophy from old wrangler Ben Johnson. Besides being sloppy and derivative, the film is also too influenced by the MTV aesthetic, hardly the appropriate style for a country-western ballad: the camera is too close to the actors, the scissors too handy in the editing room, and the volume of the soundtrack is cranked far too loud. Better talent has never been more wasted: Johnson and Gary Busey provide a measure of stability, but Tess Harper gives what has to be one of the most irritating performances of the year. Keep a sharp lookout for Mickey Rooney, playing Johnson's nursing home buddy
don't blink or you'll miss him.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesLane Frost was originally going to perform the stunts for the main character (H.D. Dalton), and his wife Kellie Kyle-Frost (now Macy) was working as Stunt Coordinator for the film at the time of Lane's death at the 1989 Frontier Days in Cheyenne, Wyoming. After Lane's death, his good friend Tuff Hedeman performed the stunt work.
- GaffesWhen HD is shaving in the mirror and his Dad is watching, he cuts himself several times, the first one in the middle of his left cheek. Afterward he is shown with bits of toilet paper stuck to the cuts, but the one on the left cheek is almost under his ear instead of where he actually cut it.
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 3 603 615 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 1 361 700 $ US
- 3 mars 1991
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 3 603 615 $ US
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By what name was My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys (1991) officially released in Canada in English?
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