Two in Revolt (1936) Poster

(1936)

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Nice charming movie
marbleann27 September 2006
The first comment I want to make is that one of the leads John Arledge who plays the young trainer is the spitting image of Steve Martin. With that out of the way the movie was very charming. From the title you would think it was about people revolting, but no it is about 2 animals. A half Shepard half wolf Lightning and a horse Warrior. The dog and the young pony bond but people are afraid that the wolf half of the dog will harm the animal so part of the early part of the movie is about Lightning being forced off the ranch and fending it on his own. Don't worry he makes out OK. Meanwhile back at the ranch Warrior turns out to be a first class racer and someone is out to steal him since the owner will not give him up. And now the action starts. Lightning gets a wind of something not being right and discovers his Pal trying to get way from the thieves. I am not going to spoil what happens. But I was impressed. The movie is a precursor to all of the Disney movies like Homeward Bound. But without all of the mushy sentimentality. There was a little side story about the trainer and the rich ranch owner daughter. But nothing distracting. The charm of seeing the 2 stars interact is priceless. The last scene of the movie Warrior sees his friend Lightning and dumps the jockey on his back to go play. I loved it.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Like a beautiful child growing up free and wild
sol-kay28 September 2006
Touching but not at all tear-jerking story about a half dog half wolf named Lighting who's forced out of the Benton horse farm and into the wild while his childhood or yearling friend, the majestic and strikingly handsome stallion, Warrior grew up without him only to later reunite with Lighting under the most unusual of circumstances.

Out on his own Lighting reverted back in order to survive in the wild to his wolf pedigree taking charge, by defeating the alpha male of a wolf pack and becoming the most feared canine in the county. Back at Benton's ranch Warrior grows up to be a powerful and fast as a bolt of lighting bay colt who's undoubtedly headed for racing greatness running morning quarter mile bullet workouts at unbelievable 21 or less second clips.

With the jealous and greedy hoodlum George Mason, Emmett Vogan, not being able to persuade Warrior's owner Cyrus Benton, Moroni Olsen, to sell the bay colt to him Mason and his hoods do the next best thing horse-nap Warrior out of his stall. Like his canine friend Lighting the rambunctious Warrior reverts back to his wild and free ingrained instincts and breaks away from the Mason gang, putting a number of them in the hospital. Warrior hooks up with a band of wild mustangs becoming their alpha, like Lighting with the wolf pack, stallion.

In the wild the two long lost friends meet and instinctively recognize each other from their early days at the Benton farm and become inseparable. It's the much smaller Lighting who comes to the aid of big and strapping warrior in a number of exciting scenes in the film. One in which he ferociously attacks one of Mason's hoods, who was trying to re-capture warrior. Lighting's wild and unrelenting attack on the hood was both so shocking and realistic, and all in one take, that for a moment I didn't think that I was watching a make-believe Hollywood movie.

Besides the two top animal stars there's also the love story between the Benton ranch's young horse trainer John Woods, John Arledge, and Mr. Benton's sweet and pretty teenage daughter Gloria, Louise Latiman.

During the movie John changes Mr. Benton's mind in his feeling that he doesn't have the right and proper breeding, the old man thinks of everything in life as a thoroughbred pedigree chart, to marry his sophisticated and well educated daughter. Mr. Benton later changes his mind at the end of the film when Mr. Benton realizes that John, like the half wolf and non-blue bred Lighting, had a lot more going for him in what he did in real life then what his blood-lines indicate on paper of how high up in the social register he is.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Animal friendships make great movies.
mark.waltz19 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The kid in all of us just loves to see movies where humans and animals bond, and if various species of animals are bonding as friends too, that makes it all the more interesting. In this case, it's a dog and a horse, brought up since they were first born, although the dog is half wolf, half German Shepherd. I'm sure in 1936, the audiences were filled with awe as a group of puppies made their way into the camera shortly after the horse, Lightning was born. The camera focuses on one of them in particular, making their way awkwardly up to the young foal, and years go by that show grown horse and dog devoted to each other.

But the humans around the stables are very wary of the mixed Warrior, and a real of the film shows warrior making it on his own. But somehow, warrior and Lightning find each other as well as trainer John Aldredge, and animal memories come back for Warrior who recognizes who was friendly to him when he was just a pup. Warrior is rather leary of Lewis Latimer, the daughter of the stable owner (or perhaps jealous), and acts a bit wild to her.

It is obvious here who the villains are as both Lightning and Warrior are chased, shot at, and in the case of others around the stable, mistreated. Then there's stable boy Willie Best who made play a subservient black character, but it's made clear that he is very hard-working, caring and loyal. It is a very interesting film in many aspects, obviously made as a B film, but impressively directed for the animal sequences alone. I have to rank this as a surprising find among RKO's programmers, remind me of MGM's "Sequoia", made just two years before and featuring a baby deer and mountain lion who grow up to be best friends.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Interesting Experiment
tmpj10 June 2002
I saw this film several nights ago. It is a curious admixture of wild-life/documentary/ drama. Director Glenn Tryon's early days in Idaho no doubt gave him a feeling for the great outdoors. There are people in this film, to be sure. There's the love story that goes on between two youngsters on a ranch where race-horses are bred. There's the father and ranch owner whose aspirations are more aristocratic than practical. Embarrassingly, there is Willie Best's shuffling, which makes it a difficult watch for Black viewers. However, the two principal actors are animals. Our zoological protagonists are the ones who are in revolt in this film. A horse named "Warrior" and a dog named "Lightning" are born within days of each other. They grow up together on the ranch forming a special rapport that few humans can influence. Each revolts in a way that only animals can, but largely because they are intelligent and high spirited. Glenn Tryon's direction almost works, but he leaves too many ends loose in the animal scenes--which are plentiful-- and it is up to the viewer to determine for him/herself what is going on at a particular point. The direction, however, is a pre-cursor to the Walt Disney and Marlon Perkins animal type adventures that would be pervasive on television in the 1950s. While this is not a great film, it does manage to raise itself slightly above the bar of the average "B" flick because of the animal actors. The one saving grace of the film is that it is not mushy, and thankfully it does not take itself too seriously. I do not recommend it highly, but it is a worthwhile watch.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed