Toni and her writer dad live in Sequoia forests. She befriends a puma cub (Gato) and fawn (Malibu). Years later, after returning them to nature and moving away, they find their forest threat... Read allToni and her writer dad live in Sequoia forests. She befriends a puma cub (Gato) and fawn (Malibu). Years later, after returning them to nature and moving away, they find their forest threatened by logging and hunting.Toni and her writer dad live in Sequoia forests. She befriends a puma cub (Gato) and fawn (Malibu). Years later, after returning them to nature and moving away, they find their forest threatened by logging and hunting.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Edward Brophy
- Forest Ranger Pete
- (uncredited)
Allan Cavan
- Forest Ranger
- (uncredited)
Donald Douglas
- Forest Ranger
- (uncredited)
Lee Phelps
- Hunter
- (uncredited)
Joe Sawyer
- Forest Ranger
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
If someone out there, anywhere, has a copy of this movie, I would dearly love to have it and get to see it again. It's been stuck in my mind since I was a little girl and watched it as a television movie. This could be a great family movie and excellent for kids -- including big kids of all ages -- especially animal lovers.
This movie is a real treasure form my childhood. I remember watching it as the morning movie on San Francisco's Channel 7 while curled up next to my mother when I was about 4 r 5. To this day I think my love for wild animals and sense of loyalty stem from this movie. The theme I hold most dear from the movie is that natural enemies can become friends when both are nurtured with love. I think this movie's message is more timely now than ever before.
This movie reminds me of how man gems have been made in Hollywood only to be lost with the passage of time. Maybe Channel 7 still has a print. It is worth contacting them to ask.
Also, my wife is from Japan and has not had the chance to see Sequoia so I hope it becomes available on DVD so I can share it with her.
This movie reminds me of how man gems have been made in Hollywood only to be lost with the passage of time. Maybe Channel 7 still has a print. It is worth contacting them to ask.
Also, my wife is from Japan and has not had the chance to see Sequoia so I hope it becomes available on DVD so I can share it with her.
"Sequoia" has haunted me since I was about 10 years old. I saw it on black-and-white television, and all I really remember about it is the scene of a mountain lion lying down and a buck deer standing close by. This fascinated me no end, though I joked about it in later years ("The camera was shut off just before the mountain lion got up, jumped on the deer, and killed it!" ha) For many years I was beginning to wonder if this film was just a dream, because I could not find it listed in any of my "movies on TV" type books. I even tried movie search services before I found the right one and they described the plot to me and I finally knew that "Sequoia" did exist! However, I am saddened to learn the information given on others of these postings--that it does not exist anymore, or has been lost. I sincerely hope this is not so, because I'd snap it up in a minute if it became available!
I saw this movie once, on television, back in the late 1950s, when I was in elementary school. The story, about a girl who adopts an orphaned puma cub and a fawn, then raises them to be friends, was fascinating. Despite the movie's age (it was already over twenty years old when I saw it) the story was moving without being sentimental and exciting without being overly violent. I have searched for any existing print on VHS tape or DVD, only to find that none apparently exists. The movie was based on a book of the same title, which I now own, by Vance Joseph Hoyt, published by Grosset & Dunlap in 1931. If it is true that no print still exists then I think it would be a very good idea to re-make it!
This movie has some of the most stunning animal photography I have ever seen. It is amazing to get an adult male deer and bobcat to work together as well as the very impressive scenes of deer and other animals in the wild.
Did you know
- TriviaPrologue: "Out of the majestic forests of California, comes a document of the wilderness--vivid proof that mankind has no exclusive claim upon the drama involved in the struggle for existence, whether that drama be comedy or tragedy. Our story begins with the dawn of a new day in the high Sierras, where whispering giants of ten thousand years keep benign vigil over all the creatures of the wild."
- Crazy creditsThe film's credits are shown in a scroll and are opened by a hand.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 11m(71 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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