| Index | 6 reviews in total |
8 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Charming, 2 September 2004
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Author:
astoryweaver from Riverside, California
This was said to be John Denver's last film. As I watched it, I couldn't help but feel sadness over that aspect. I thought this was a wonderful family film with John Denver playing a role I had longed wanted to see him in. A pioneer. A man blazing a wild mountain trail in a covered wagon. Being in the Rockies, with native Americans, bears, eagles, wolves, and mountain men. The story was very well told. The actors all played their roles to perfection. I love these kind of stories. Whenever they are made on modern film, we are able to re-live the past with these stories. I remember seeing James Reed in the mini-series North and South. I liked him as the Union soldier. He was great in this as well. The boys who played John Denver's sons looked familiar, but I couldn't place them in other projects. Entertainment Tonight highlighted the story about this final film. I wouldn't have known about it otherwise. When it was shown on cable, my sister taped it for me to see. All in all, this film will be forever treasured by true-blue John Denver fans. And we all wish, more than anything, that he was still around to give us more of the same. Ten plus in my book.
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Missing The Great John Denver, 6 July 2003
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Author:
astoryweaver from Riverside, CA
Entertainment Tonight previewed this wonderful little film as being the last thing John Denver made. It makes me sad to think this wonderful entertainer is gone from this world and will never make anything else for us to enjoy. I wish his role could have been larger and broader. He was a great actor in addition to being a great singer. We miss you in this world, J. D.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Slight but entertaining, 2 March 2001
Author:
desperado1uk from Sherborne, England
This is the sort of 'great outdoors' movies that you can watch once, enjoy,
and then promptly forget about. The movie provides a good sweep of
Colorado,
and the story - about a family trying to catch up with the gold rush -
passable. However, when all the humans on stage are out acted by Bart the
Bear, you know you are watching a straight-to-video movie. John Denver, the
only recognisable actor, stares into space for long periods of times
(probably writing a song for his next album), and all the others are
Legends
of the Fall rip-offs. However, the most amusing sequence in when Denver
erects and furnishes a cabin in about an hour. Don't let me put you off,
this is lightweight entertainment and good fun when there are nothing but
repeats on the T.V.
Best Bit: Bart the Bear's dramatic drooling.
Corrections, if you please, 3 September 2009
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Author:
one189teen50five from United States
I had to laugh at the remarks of several saying "the cabin was built in one day". That is as ridiculous as the remarks were. The cabin was built over several weeks, those weeks not filmed. The oldest son went with the mountain man to get supplies. It took much longer in those days to get to places. They had no corner markets, 7-11s, etc. Come on. Common sense teaches you that much. What else did they have to do but work on the cabin from sun up to sun down? They sure didn't have a TV to sit and watch. The era they represented was done so accordingly. Do not be critical of this tale. Perhaps a lot more footage was left off. We do not know. I wish the DVD had the extra stuff in it, but it does not.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Ho hum but watchable -- beware racial slurs., 21 January 2006
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Author:
inkwolf from Wisconsin
I agree with the former reviewer about the cabin. I mean, they are
trapped in the wilderness because this guy, who can build a log cabin
in one day, CAN'T FIX A WAGON AXLE BEFORE WINTER! Sheesh, believable.
I'm sure wagon axles were a lot tougher to make than houses.
You also may not want to show it to impressionable young Indian kids,
since some characters use derogatory language and racial slurs, and the
one Indian character is something of a stereotype.
The movie won't make you laugh or cry, but it won't kill you with
boredom either, and if you have the hour and a half to kill, there are
worse things to watch out there. Bart the Bear is always good, and
there are a few charming moments.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Bear or Holy Man saves pioneer family., 3 August 2001
Author:
cullen4u
This movie was shown on the Discovery-Animal Planet network.
The bear, if there ever really was a bear, is the second
supporting character. A delight and disconcerting at
the same time. There is a native-american belief that
animals could take on human bodies and vise-versa.
This idea was only briefly exposed in a few spots.
The opening scenes are of a modern teenager who has problems.
What teen doesn't, especially about parents? He learns
he is to inherit his great-grandfathers journal and other
personal affects. The journal was written late in life
and starts with problems encountered while moving west
in the fall of 1850. Time shifts to and from 1850 carry
the
story back and forth as the youngster reads about his ancestor,
his problems, ideas, hopes and fears. They are similar to
his.
Historical discrepancy aside this movie would appeal to
teens and adults. As with all material one should inspect
and verify fact and falsehood. The lad was allowed to travel
with a "real live mount'n man" to trade for supplies.
The last rendezvous took place in the spring of 1840, ten
years
before this family arrived in the Rockies.
Background views are great. The highest points of violence
were
a skillet defense by an expectant mother against a scalp'n knife wielding
attacker and a couple of daring fisticuff events. Alfred
Hitchcock would be proud of the drama left to the viewer.
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