Wooly Boys (2001) Poster

(2001)

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7/10
No retirement for old men
przgzr3 October 2012
Decades ago actors (and, certainly, actresses) often used to quit making movies, to retire and be remembered for what they've done while being young, strong, beautiful. Some decided to reappear for a special occasion, like James Cagney, some kept their decision till the end. Greta Garbo and Cary Grant come first into my mind.

Today the times have changed. After Katherine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Jack Lemmon, Henry Fonda and others that didn't want to waste their last breaths, many actors that have approached the years where traditional lover and action hero roles don't fit much any more not only keep on playing, but aren't satisfied to get supporting roles for new young stars movies – they even make movies where all top casting positions contains their peers. And while Clint, Tommy Lee and others decided to go to space, Kris, Peter and Keith's movie takes place in (similarly isolated) American wilderness.

For Kristofferson, as a country composer and singer, and as a "Heaven's Gate" star, this is a natural environment. Carradine also had his share of roles that took him to middle USA, "Nashville" and "The Long Riders" among best remembered. And for Fonda this may be the kind of landscape that he rode along in "Easy Rider".

Though their best years are behind them they are still capable of making a good job. They are not stars like Jones and Eastwood (and, unfortunately, never have been – just a step behind, having maybe just a teaspoon less luck to make few successes in a line), and they don't get first class productions. However, taking what's been offered, none of them disappointed us. There was no need for a big theater type of acting, the three men are small people from small town and big gestures would be overacting.

Though the story keeps running in the limits of solid TV production, the writers made some unusual and funny jokes (stolen dead body, agent Collins' enthusiasm...) and avoided making the conflict between worlds of a teenage computer fan and his grandfather from isolated farm become a center point of jokes (so many times repeated in movies like "Crocodile Dundee", "Coming to America", "Starman", "Les visiteurs" etc) – screenplay is definitely better than one would expect seeing that long list of writers. However, the directing seems rather slow and too mainstream, leaving some scenes underused and a lot of potentials partially ignored. As it could be expected, the end is too sentimental containing no surprises, very TV-ish, but doesn't ruin the integrity.

Anyway, it is always a pleasure to watch those three next-to-top stars and, without having to big expectations, those who like all or some of them won't regret.
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6/10
Just average
Chromium_528 November 2005
Mediocre movie in the vein of "An Unfinished Life" that has its moments, but falls apart because it doesn't know whether to be a drama or a slapstick comedy. Peter Fonda and Kris Kristofferson give amazing performances, and share some very funny and bittersweet scenes, but they're constantly being interrupted by pointless comic relief. A movie about an old man waiting to die should not have bungling cops, Dukes of Hazzard villains, and annoying teenagers. The latter is especially grating. I realize the entire plot centers around the kid, but after ten minutes of his shrill, nasal whining I wanted him to get trampled to death by the sheep.

It has beautiful footage of the North Dakota landscape (after a confusing side trip to Minneapolis), and like I said before, Fonda and Kristofferson are wonderful, but the rest is a wash. If they'd scrapped the comedy, this would have been a great movie.
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5/10
Fish-out-of-water in the Badlands of ND with Peter Fonda & Kris Kristofferson
Wuchakk21 October 2015
Released to2001, "Wooly Boys" stars Peter Fonda and Kris Kristofferson as two aging sheep ranchers in the Badlands of North Dakota. After the former pays a visit to his daughter (Robin Dearden) in Minneapolis, he brings back his city-bred 16 year-old grandson (Joseph Mazzello). Keith Carradine plays a country sheriff, Rosanna DeSoto a ranch hand and Michael Booth an FBI agent. Jad Mager and Adam Logan are on hand as troublemakers while T. Mychael Rambo plays a hearse driver.

This dramedy focuses is on the conflict-habituated friendship of the two older ranchers and the visiting teen being a fish-out-water in the wilderness, which brings to mind 2003's "Secondhand Lions." At around the 30-minute mark there are several laugh-out-loud scenes, which are less frequent throughout the rest of the movie. The lines of the idiotic FBI agent are the best. Beyond this, the cast and authentic North Dakota locations are great, but the movie's mediocre about half the time. For instance, the kid responds to Kristofferson's character in one scene and it's wholly unconvincing. A top-of-the-line movie would re-do the scene or ad lib; whatever it took to make it work. So it's one of those part good/part meh movies, but I think the good makes it worthwhile, like the laughs, the birthing scene, the cast and the ND locations.

The film runs 99 minutes and was shot in Fryburg, Beach & Medora, North Dakota, and Minneapolis.

GRADE: C+
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Not bad
slyfox727329 February 2004
The movie was not as good as I hoped. It wasn't bad but it was lacking. The story felt rushed, some of the humor was too obvious (there were scenes that were funny though), and there should have been clearer character development. I think it's a good film for children and older folks. I had hoped there would have been more film of the badlands and it failed to truly show the beauty of the prairie. For an independent low-budget release it was pretty good. At least it didn't make North Dakotans look like backwater hicks ( ala the horrible "Fargo" movie which was not filmed in nor did it take place in the city it was named after!)
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6/10
Half very good; Half mediocre
drpakmanrains10 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I had never heard of this film, but bought it sight-unseen because of the fine cast, while cruising Amazon. It was summarized as similar in theme to Secondhand Lions, which I found disappointing. I found the first half of this film to be rather boring, as the director couldn't decide whether he was making a madcap corny family comedy, or a film about a youth who gets an education from his grandfather about how to live close to the land. When the film emphasized the relationships between Peter Fonda and his grandson, the excellent Joseph Mazzello, and also Kris Kristofferson, it was interesting, humorous, natural, and involving. When it focused on the law, it was silly, broad, and distracting, except for Keith Carradine, who maintained a modicum of believability. The final 30 minutes rescued the film for me, as it mostly veered away from the unnecessary Keystone Kops stuff, and became truly affecting emotionally. Had the movie emphasized the central story throughout, without the silliness, I would have given it a 9 or 10, and it probably would be better known. Still, it is worth a look, and overall, I preferred it to Secondhand Lions.
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10/10
One film not to be missed!
km004a553420 October 2002
Having looked everywhere for information about this film for well over a year, I was shocked when it suddenly popped up on Cable and Satellite last weekend. It was quite different to what I had expected, but nevertheless well worth the wait. If you are looking for a film that will make you laugh and make you cry, but leave you with a nice warm feeling inside, then look no further. The whole cast is excellent, without a weak link and there are fine performances by Peter Fonda, Kris Kristofferson and Keith Carradine. But, not for the first time, Joe Mazzello (Radio Flyer,Jurassic Park,The Cure, Simon Birch) steals the show.As Joe's character, Charles is taken, reluctantly, on the journey of a lifetime, he discovers a whole new world, his roots and himself. We, the viewers, see a hugely talented young actor and the character he portrays growing up before our very eyes. This is one film not to be missed!
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9/10
A Great Story
gsquared3223 October 2001
This is one of those heart warming movies about a technologically advanced grandson (Joe Mazzello, "Jurassic Park") and a backwoods sheep farmer grandfather (Peter Fonda). After being disconnected for many years from one another, they get the chance to discover what the other one is all about. A supporting role by Kris Kristofferson makes this movie a must see.
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10/10
First Class Entertainment
theoldgit22 October 2002
I enjoyed this film. It showed how a young city boy grew up and faced life, from being a spoilt brat he turned out to be a man of decisions and courage.The two main men in the film played there parts with feeling and i could belive in them.
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10/10
Wooly Boys is shear pleasure
dol3334 February 2007
Cast, dialogue and relational theme peppered with good humor make this movie a must see. Fonda, Kristofferson, Mazzello, Carradine stand out as friends who love and work for a lifetime not just for a movie time. North Dakota boy is where I want to be...its where country stays cool, computers are a fitting bit of the action and family & friends bond for life.

Kate and Martinez bring a feisty female touch to the film that does not go overboard but compliments the boys nicely.

Some of the lines have stayed in our house bringing up a laugh and a desire to watch the show again...like "that's none-ya" and "no cussing inside" And though the main characters name is Stoneman there is nothing cold about this movie. We have viewed it often enough to have caught most of the bloopers...like "Skeeleton trees" rather than Skeleton trees as written on FBI Collins pager...but the birth of a lamb and a Wooly Boy makes up for the faux pas.

Want to feel better after a flick? Watch Wooly Boys and plan on it. Enjoy
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9/10
Excellent! Kris kristofferson and Adam Stradlin are hilarious duo!
jfkmart10 October 2001
I've just gotten out of a screening of this film and I have to say, WOW!This one will hopefully be up for some awards.Kris Kristofferson is as always charming, sexy, and wonderful. I loved his comic repartee with newcomer Adam Stradlin. Where did they find this guy, he's great!Stradlin has the intensity of a young Gary oldman and the charisma of Mel Gibson. Everyone shines.Lil' blond Bonnie Borst as the wacky greyhound bus passenger, this girl should have her own sitcom.Peter Fonda tops his performance in "The Limey" and really carries this film. Co-stars Greg Sporleader and Jad mager who I've heard are hardened Shakespeare thespians create believable in-bred hic's, better than Cooter and Roscoe P. Coltrane from "Dukes of Hazzard" I highly recommend it. 10!
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8/10
A funny Freewheelin' version of: 'Get busy Living or get busy dying!
Silly_Whyte_boye28 April 2005
Warning: Spoilers
BEWARE: If You supported Jeb Bush and his brother's Terri Shrivo's 'Right to Life' case, 'The Wooly Boys' is out of your league and definitely NOT FOR YOU!! It's film about getting busy living, here and now with dying with dignity when that time comes.

'The Wooly Boys' is set in North Dakota where men are men and the sheep are running scared in 3/4 time! Peter Fonda and Kris Kristofferson are fantastic together as sheep herders Stoney and Shuck. Although Kris has a pretty crappy opening scene, he shines as Shuck, Stoney's 'pain in the ass', yet ever loyal/lovable friend. I hope you'll agree, Joe Mazzello is an acting force to be reckoned with!

I thought it's justifiably funny, especially in the wake of Terri Shrivo, to have the heroes committing numerous felonies, most with a deadly weapon starting with assault, two counts of kidnapping, The Mann Act, and grand theft just to get Stoney out of the hospital back home to live and die with dignity. Felonies must run in the family, Stoney's grandson Charles is a computer hacker with a chip on his shoulder and too much time on his hands. But, it is totally worth the price of the rental to see Kris Kristofferson cross dressed in a nurses uniform!
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8/10
Finally saw the movie...
lindaseinfeld3 November 2006
I recently caught Wooly Boys on IFC, and I was glad to finally see the movie.I really love anything with Kris Kristofferson! He seemed like a natural cowboy. I laughed many times throughout the movie--especially at the Spratt brothers. Adam Stradlin (one of the Spratt brothers) looks like he could be a young John Travolta. He is so funny! It was great to see all the scenes that are set in Medora. Its worth seeing the movie just for all the gorgeous scenery. I used to go to the Medora Musical every year. I remember Bonnie being in the musical, and I see that she is now doing an online news show called News for Blondes. I missed her part in the movie, so I will have to wait till it comes on again.
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Honestly Sincere
Darrell-1215 March 2002
I recently had the opportunity to see this film at the FARGO FILM FESTIVAL. As a North Dakotan, I must be proud of any project that promotes North Dakota. WOOLY BOYS definitely does its fair share of "promoting." To be honest, I expected more. For a film that falsely calls itself "North Dakota's first major feature film" I was anticipating a sincere look at Modern North Dakota, or maybe an ernest approach at our history. I did not, however, expect to see yet another film that explores the "golly gee" persona of our elderly and silly folk. (Though these people exist and I love them!)

In regards to FARGO (THE MOVIE), some of the same people that support WOOLY BOYS fame, claim the film (FARGO) makes us look like a bunch of "idiots" and "dorks" and "other such silly names"...In WOOLY BOYS, apparently we are epitomized by Scruffy "Sheep Lovers." That's great.

Meanwhile, Kristofferson gave a hell of a performance. I was in awe. The film had its funny moments and I was impressed with some of the photography. However, the film did not exemplify what it is to live in North Dakota or what it is to be a North Dakotan. Look for this film on USA (CABLE) Saturday afternoons. Because it is good enough to watch in its entirety, if you're a fan of the named actors. (or some silly manure jokes)
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8/10
Beautiful story of family redemption
wrxsti544 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Set mostly on a sheep ranch in rural North Dakota (hence Wooly Boys), the movie follows the fortunes of AJ Stoneman or Stoney (Peter Fonda) who travels to Minneapolis to re-engage with his pampered tech geek 16 year old grandson Charlie (Joe Mazzello) as he feels he has little time left. Somewhat estranged from his high powered realtor daughter Kate (Robin Deardon) for 9 years who lured her father to a Minneapolis hospital for a checkup that he refuses until he collapses from an aneurysm. His best friend and fellow rancher Shuck (Kris Kristopherson) busts Stoney out of the hospital taking nervous Charlie with them. Taking Charlie is compounded by them holding hostage a hearse driver who they abandon along with the coffin in it.

Stoney starts to teach his city slicker grandson the ways of country life (old style cooking, horseback riding and even delivering a lamb). Headstrong and spoilt by his parents' wealth, Charlie at first resists and then begins to bond with his grandpa who he hasn't seen since a small boy. The plot has some humorous twists as Shuck and Stoney with Charlie in tow evade an over the top FBI manhunt. Kate is reunited with Charlie and has a little time with her rugged outdoor Dad until his aneurysm catches up with him.

Fonda and Kristopherson are two elderly and established actors who apprise their roles with authenticity and emotion. Wooly Boys gives a window into the reasons why Joe Mazzello became such a star and at 16 years old, he was already a seasoned and fabulous actor. All in all a warm and enjoyable movie.
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10/10
Well- Acted and Poignant
anitaken13 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I loved this film, which, while it has many funny scenes, is an essentially poignant tale of a stoic man of few words, who would like to reconnect with the daughter and grandson he let slip away from him, but does not know how to do so. This same man also has no clue as to how much wiser his oldest friend/ranch hand is. Meanwhile there is a local sheriff who knows that his deputy is a total sleaze, but has no idea how dangerous he is, the deputy's two moronic nephews, who should have been smothered in their cribs, and a female sheep shearer, who fights with, and is about halfway in love with, the ranch hand. The stoic man, A. J. "Stoney" Stoneman, is played by Peter Fonda. The daughter, Kate Harper, is played by Robin Dearden. Kate is a high-powered executive. The grandson, Charles/Charlie/Chuck, is played by Joe Mazzello. Charles is a pampered and spoiled rich kid and computer whiz. The Sheriff, Hank Dawson, is played by Keith Carradine in another excellent performance by this always-capable actor. The old friend/ranch hand, Shuck, is played by Kris Kristofferson. (He and Carradine are truly old friends, having starred together in the 1985 film noir, TROUBLE IN MIND).

Comic relief is provided by the sleazy deputy and his nephews and by an FBI agent with a room temperature IQ, although Kristofferson has some hilarious moments when he breaks Stoney out of the hospital - - facing down a sadistic nurse with a gun and a warning "Lady, I castrate sheep with my teeth; there's no telling what I'm capable of." He goes on to perch the nurse's cap on top of his head and covers his bearded face with a surgical mask and his clothes with a scrub gown in order to wheel Stoney out of the hospital, and he finally hijacks a hearse for transport for the two of them and the reluctant grandson to North Dakota. For a man who doesn't even know how to drive, he is remarkably resourceful.

The scenery is breathtaking, and the acting is superb. Kristofferson steals the picture right out from under the always excellent Fonda. Stoney thinks his friend is a man of limited capabilities. The grandson picks up some of this attitude, although he ought to have picked up on the way that Shuck has kept tabs on him as he tries to slip off to make a call on his cellphone. Shuck is suddenly removing the phone from his hand, telling him that while he would be perfectly happy to let the kid go, he knows Stoney wants to take his grandson to the ranch, so that's the way it's going to be. Then he casually drops the phone on the ground, shattering it, and says "I'm just no good around machinery." Later, the grandson surprises Shuck firing up his (the grandson's) computer, having discovered that the computer plays chess. Shuck, whom you might think from Stoney's teasing, is barely literate, has a chessboard out and is getting ready to set up a game. Stoney has also given Charlie the impression that Shuck has no idea that he (Stoney) is dying. Charlie later rages at Shuck to wake up to what is happening. Shuck gazes sadly at this clueless kid and tells him "you can stay, or you can go, but I do believe that this is the last time you'll see Stoney." All these years that the two have worked together, it is Shuck and not Stoney who has always been the clear-eyed realist.

The final third of the film packs the most emotional punch, as the two old sheep farmers and the kid - warned by Martinez the sheep-shearer of the pursuit by the law that could send Stoney and Shuck to prison for the rest of their lives - take off overland by horseback toward Canada. Hank and Kate are also in pursuit by horseback to try to aid in the escape and retrieve Charlie. The Deputy and his two nephews are in pursuit intending to kill Shuck and Stoney, an endeavor in which they are totally outclassed by two old guys and a smart-assed kid.

The escape attempt is too much for Stoney, who collapses. Charlie spots the pursuing FBI agent and begs Shuck to leave Stoney and save himself, which Shuck will not do, so the kid has to use his computer skills and his wits to successfully misdirect the G-man, and Kate arrives with Hank in time to reconcile briefly but movingly with her father. It is not a happy ending, but it is a satisfying one, with the kid and Shuck bonding with a new and unexpected respect for each other. As Charlie prepares to return to Minneapolis for the remainder of the school year (with a promised return to the ranch in the summer when he will undoubtedly help Shuck adapt to the technology that can run the ranch more efficiently), he leaves the computer behind with Shuck. Not only does it play chess, it also plays gin rummy. They walk up the hill teasing each other. Charlie will probably even persuade Shuck to learn how to drive - maybe with Martinez teaching him. And maybe Hank will start making the occasional trip to Minneapolis. Just sayin'.
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