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The Black Stallion Returns

The book The Black Stallion Returns was made into the movie The Black Stallion Returns.

Which one did you like better, the book or the movie?  There are 4 votes for the book, and 6 votes for the movie.

Book details for The Black Stallion Returns

The Black Stallion Returns was written by Walter Farley. The book was published in 1983 by RANDOM House. More information on the book is available on Amazon.com.

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Movie details for The Black Stallion Returns

The movie was released in 1983 and directed by Robert Dalva. The Black Stallion Returns was produced by MGM (Video & DVD). More information on the movie is available on Amazon.com and also IMDb.

Actors on this movie include Kelly Reno, Vincent Spano, Allen Garfield, Woody Strode, Ferdy Mayne, Jodi Thelen, Teri Garr, Doghmi Larbi, Angelo Infanti, Luigi Mezzanotte, Franco Citti, Robert Behling, Joe Murphy (II), Chris Larrance, Loris Bazzocchi, Angelo Susani, Willie Allen Faiella, Ray Hassett, Gregory Snegoff and Nick Sternberg.

 

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A rare sequel that can stand alone, 1983's The Black Stallion Returns is both a fun follow-up to the 1979 Carroll Ballard/Francis Ford Coppola film and a fine adventure in its own right. Kelly Reno returns as the now adolescent, deceptively ordinary Al... Read More
A rare sequel that can stand alone, 1983's The Black Stallion Returns is both a fun follow-up to the 1979 Carroll Ballard/Francis Ford Coppola film and a fine adventure in its own right. Kelly Reno returns as the now adolescent, deceptively ordinary Alec Ramsay, who stows away on a plane for Casablanca after the titular horse is kidnapped by Arabs. Getting him back pitches Alec into the middle of tribal rivalries and all sorts of complicated, dangerous intrigue. The cast includes Teri Garr, Vincent Spano, and Woody Strode, but the real star here may be cinematographer Carlo Di Palma, a veteran of several Woody Allen films and a master of color, light, and framing. Director Robert Dalva edited the previous film and happily executes countless ideas he appears to have stored up from his first stallion outing. But it's Reno's resourceful hero--his anti-Harry Potter normalcy--that finally takes hold of viewers. --Tom Keogh