Retro Reel: The Courage of Lassie


Posted on Apr 7, 2008 By Julia Szabo

Blue Sierra, 1946, 92 minutes  

Add this title to your Netflix queue  

This movie is in the FetchDog Top 20

Here's everyone's favorite factoid about Lassie: She was almost always played by a male Collie (the male of the species being a larger, more imposing screen presence). But this film differs from all the other Lassie movies in that the title character is a "he" both on-screen and off.  

Here's something else that distinguishes this installment of the Lassie franchise: in this movie, America's canine sweetheart is branded (gasp!) a vicious dog.

The action begins when a little Collie pup is separated from his litter and grows up, Tarzan-style, with wild creatures in pastoral scenes straight out of an old-school Disney nature flick. The little dog is shot by a little boy, then rescued and adopted by a little girl - Kathie Merrick, played by young Elizabeth Taylor (whose gorgeousness as a teenager was unmatched). Bill, as Kathie names him, leads an idyllic farm life, fulfilling his breed's destiny by rounding up sheep.  

Then, in a series of plot twists that might seem impossible to some, yet are entirely believable to dog lovers, Bill goes missing and winds up drafted as an army K9 serving in the trenches during the first World War. (Note to parents of very young children: Some scenes are just too upsetting.)  

It's not spoiling the plot to say that this Lassie - like all the other Lassies - does come home. But what makes this movie so different is its highly evolved, way-ahead-of-its-time mastery of animal psychology. Frank Morgan (of all people, the actor who previously played the titular charlatan in The Wizard of Oz) plays wise Harry McBain, who nobly defends Bill in court when the dog faces punishment by death. Daring to equate the dog's traumatic war experience with that of human soldiers, this movie shows tremendous compassion for all war veterans, whether they fight on two legs or four. (A word to anyone who jumps to condemn any dog as "vicious": watching this Lassie may just change your mind.)

The movie happens to be a favorite of the multi-talented Bruce Weber; the photographer-filmmaker includes several excerpts from it in his irresistible, impressionist 2004 documentary A Letter to True (which is dedicated to one of Weber's dogs). Together, the two films make an uplifting double feature.


Presence of dogs: reelreelreelreel
Respect for dogs: reelreelreelreel
Canine star quality: reelreelreelreel
Family friendly: reelreelreelreel


 

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