IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
A policeman father gets a repeat juvenile offender to be a cross country running partner for his blind high school son.A policeman father gets a repeat juvenile offender to be a cross country running partner for his blind high school son.A policeman father gets a repeat juvenile offender to be a cross country running partner for his blind high school son.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win & 9 nominations total
Taylor Russell
- Amy Conrad
- (as Taylor Russell McKenzie)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
I enjoyed the film and the various story lines presented kept me interested and kept the plot moving. A good watch.
As a former XC runner myself, the director could have done much more research into the sport. Many facts/reality are not there, had they been I would have notched this up a bit higher. Also made the 'villain' in the movie difficult to believe because the sport doesn't typically attract those type of jocks.
The back-and-forth between the runners assigned to each other was what I found most intriguing.
Good cinematography that helped tell a well-written story.
As a former XC runner myself, the director could have done much more research into the sport. Many facts/reality are not there, had they been I would have notched this up a bit higher. Also made the 'villain' in the movie difficult to believe because the sport doesn't typically attract those type of jocks.
The back-and-forth between the runners assigned to each other was what I found most intriguing.
Good cinematography that helped tell a well-written story.
10danbaig
I absolutely loved this film!! Wonderful story. Great chemistry with the leads. Beautiful ending! Simply incredible!!
I would not waste your time watching this film. It was bad in every way. The acting, screenplay, direction, music. The music is so loud with singing while they are running but they are TALKING while running and you can't understand or hear them because of the loud music. The acting is wooden and pretty over the top. The direction I thought was like a Lifetime movie and what do you know the Director is from Lifetime movies. You can feel it as soon as you start watching it. The blind kid was not bad in it but to have all these stereotypes around him made it hard to watch. You really laugh at the all the cliche lines and characters in it.
This film is simply rubbish! It's a kind of "feel good" movie that envisions a fantasy world, one that has nothing to do with the real world. It's a trite little tale, completely predictable and unimaginative, based on a script that appears to be written by a child. The atmosphere is all "unicorns and cotton candy", where everyone is just so sweet, with the exception of the high school bully, who plays the part as expected. It's a movie for the Hallmark channel, or maybe Canadian TV, where everything has to be made sugar coated. It seems to be a family production and really is completely divorced from real life.
This was a really heartwarming film that struck a lot of the right chords: overcoming a disability; having tolerance and respect for persons who are different in terms of culture, race, or ability; and meeting the challenges of single parenthood. During the screening I attended in Vancouver in April, young people in the audience were well engaged and, in the climactic race scene, cheering on the hero. It's a well-paced film with high production values.
One of the challenges of a classic overcoming-the-odds film is making the characters and their situation believable. This film achieved a good level of credibility by giving all characters, both the good and the bad, a mix of traits. The hero has his faults, just as the less likable characters have their moments of grace and remorse.
The film is well acted throughout. It was a testament to Richard Harmon's acting that, in a Q&A session following the screening I attended, one of the audience asked whether the actor is blind or sighted.
One of the challenges of a classic overcoming-the-odds film is making the characters and their situation believable. This film achieved a good level of credibility by giving all characters, both the good and the bad, a mix of traits. The hero has his faults, just as the less likable characters have their moments of grace and remorse.
The film is well acted throughout. It was a testament to Richard Harmon's acting that, in a Q&A session following the screening I attended, one of the audience asked whether the actor is blind or sighted.
Did you know
- TriviaThis movie stars Richard Harmon as Alex and his sister Jessica Harmon as Mrs. McVie. It is directed by their father Alan Harmon.
- GoofsEvery time Alex is injured, he ends up cut and bleeding on his upper left forehead. Odds against repeated accidental injuries always befalling one spot are astronomical.
- Quotes
Alex Taylor: Do you mind if I, uh... I touch your face?
Brad Coleman: You feeling lonely, Alex?
Alex Taylor: I just, uh, wanna know what you look like.
- SoundtracksIf I Had Wings
(theme song)
Written and performed by Scott MacIntyre
- How long is If I Had Wings?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Color
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