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                Seabiscuit 
  Universal Pictures 
  140 minutes 
  Commentary by Dr. Lee Ramsey  
                 
                   Every
                      now and then a big production movie comes along whose impact
                      outpaces all the pre-release hype that puts it prancing
                      in the starting gate. The movie startles and carries you
                      for a ride worth remembering, if not taking over and again. Seabiscuit is
                      such a movie. 
                   The
                      story is adapted from Laura Hillenbrand's well written
                      account of the depression era, 1930's thoroughbred racehorse,
                      Seabiscuit. A boxy horse with an "eggbeater" gait
                      and a stunted tail, Seabiscuit has all the pedigree and
                      none of the winning marks of a first-rate racehorse. After
                      three years of racing abuse, frequent whippings from frustrated
                      trainers and riders, and with only occasional victory,
                      Seabiscuit has descended to lackluster sprints around the
                      minor tracks. That is until Tom Smith (Chris Cooper), a
                      seasoned trainer, spots the beauty within the beast. He
                      convinces Charles Howard (Jeff Bridges) to buy Seabiscuit
                      and to take a long shot on a horse that hasn't yet been
                      taught to run. The magic begins when the down-and-out jockey,
                      Red Pollard (Tobey Maguire), blind in one eye and prone
                      to quoting Shakespeare, desperately pleads with Smith for
                      a chance to ride Seabiscuit. Pollard finds his horse and
                      Seabiscuit finds his rider. Together, they take the nation
                      of the 1930s and the contemporary movie viewers for a ride.
                      They overcome injuries to horse and rider, defeat all challengers
                      - even the unbeatable War Admiral - rack up some of the
                      fastest race times on record, and eventually win the prestigious
                      Santa Anita Handicap on a third and final try. When the
                      spirited Seabiscuit mounted by the crippled and grinning
                      Pollard prances into the victory circle at Santa Anita,
                      everyone in the theater feels like a winner. "Don't
                      think," said Pollard after the race, "he didn't
                      know he was the hero." 
                   So
                      what is it about this movie that jolts? It's just a horse,
                      right? Something out of American sports history that only
                      a few people know or care much about? 
                   For
                      starters, Seabiscuit taps something deep within
                      the American psyche. This is a story about much more than
                      a horse. It is about those periods in our history (this
                      one happens to be the Great Depression) when as a people,
                      pride has been beaten down and hope is without a face.
                      Seabiscuit, the horse, gives shape to both. Seabiscuit,
                      Pollard, and Smith are the comeback kids, the dark horses,
                      the unlikely heroes who for a season lift the heads of
                      a people whose unemployment lines have grown long and who
                      need to see an undervalued loser find his winning stride.
                      At the height of Seabiscuit's fame, in his 1938 challenge
                      of War Admiral, one in three Americans listened to the
                      radio broadcast of the race. While President Roosevelt
                      reminded the nation that, "The only thing we have
                      to fear is fear itself," a gutsy horse and a fearless
                      rider flashed around the tracks to give flesh to such belief.
                      As the author Hillenbrand states, "For a brief moment
                      in America, a little brown race horse wasn't just a little
                      brown race horse. He was the proxy for a nation." The
                      film works this theme beautifully. 
                  There
                      is more, however, especially for those who watch Seabiscuit through
                      the eyes of faith. Seabiscuit, Pollard, Smith, and Howard
                      affirm the essential dignity and worth of all creation
                      - humans and animals. These characters forge a bond upon
                      the anvil of common dignity that God bestows upon every
                      creature. As Smith says to Howard when tending to a wounded
                      horse, "You don't just shoot somebody when he gets
                      a little beat up, do you?" The theme recurs throughout
                      the movie. We can't help but be moved when the crippled
                      jockey, Pollard, nurses the wounded horse, Seabiscuit,
                      back to health. "Seabiscuit and I were a couple of
                      old cripples together," the jockey said later, "all
                      washed up. But out there among the hooting owls, we both
                      got sound again." Such statements don't need religious
                      dressing. Those with ears to hear can discern underneath
                      the dialogue the persistent care of God -- the source of
                      life -- who in the beginning declares that all of creation
                      is "good."  
                  This
                      leads to the most compelling spiritual dimension of the
                      film. For all its pounding hooves, Seabiscuit quietly
                      displays at the core the character virtue of tenderness.                    Like an injured jockey patiently exercising a lame horse,
                    gentleness walks among the scenes of this movie. Moments
                    of care between horse and owners provide a counterpoint
                    to the blistering racetrack scenes. For example, the champion
                    racehorse Seabiscuit shares his stable with a saddle pony,
                    a stray dog, and a monkey. These lowly "friends" calm
                      his high-spirits. Pollard, the roughneck jockey and former
                      boxer, is prone to violent temper tantrums, but he reads
                      Shakespeare in his spare time. He recites poetry to the
                      horse. Smith and Howard make business deals based far more
                      upon their respect for each other than their desire to
                      win. At the heart of each of these characters resides tenderness,
                      malleable yet principled. So when racing victory comes,
                      it tastes that much sweeter. 
                  We
                      are a people hungry for tenderness. Especially in these
                      days of global fear, meanness on the streets, false victories,
                      and unaffordable health care, we long for blessed kindness.
                      We yearn for a little compassion towards those who are
                      wounded, a little respect for those tossed on life's scrapheaps.
                      As Leonato says in Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, "There
                      are no faces truer than those that are so washed [with
                      kindness]. How much better is it to weep at joy than to
                      joy at weeping!" We want to run races worth winning,
                      not for the payout but for the sheer joy of getting there
                      together. What better place to find God than as somehow
                      wrapped up in these human longings shared by so many, and
                      practiced more often than recognized. 
                  Seabiscuit thrills,
                      to be sure, and you may just cheer or clap in the theater
                      when the odd-gaited pony crosses the finish line. But I'm
                      betting that this horse does much more than thrill. I'm
                      wagering that Seabiscuit and his rider remind us for a
                      few moments, with a lifetime to work out the details, of
                      who God creates us to be. 
           
          Copyright ©2003 Dr. Lee Ramsey 
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