The Man from Snowy River

    The Man from Snowy River
    1982

    Synopsis

    Jim Craig has lived his first 18 years in the mountains of Australia on his father's farm. The death of his father forces him to go to the lowlands to earn enough money to get the farm back on its feet.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Tom BurlinsonJim Craig
    • Sigrid ThorntonJessica Harrison
    • Terence DonovanHenry Craig
    • Kirk DouglasHarrison / Spur
    • Jack ThompsonClancy
    • Tommy DysartMountain Man
    • Tony BonnerKane
    • Chris HaywoodCurly
    • Gus MercurioFrew
    • June JagoMrs. Bailey

    Recommendations

    • 80

      The Guardian

      More than just an Aussie horse opera, this film employs stunning scenery, technical flair and Kirk Douglas in two roles in its pursuit of an uplifting conclusion.
    • 80

      Variety

      A rattling good adventure story, inspired by a legendary poem [by A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson] which nearly every Australian had drummed into him as a child, filmed in spectacularly rugged terrain in the Great Dividing Ranges in Victoria.
    • 75

      Miami Herald

      We hear a lot about the great hunger for "wholesome" films, but it is rare that one is successful; wholesomeness and treacle seem to have become confused in the Hollywood mind. The Man From Snowy River is different. It's a lesson in how such films should be made. [26 Jan 1983, p.B8]
    • 75

      Washington Post

      A rousing and scenically breathtaking romance about ranch life in the 1880s, the film should recommend itself strongly to families. [24 Dec 1982, p.14]
    • 75

      TV Guide Magazine

      A fine directorial debut from George Miller.
    • 63

      Chicago Sun-Times

      It's corny in places, and kind of dumb, and its subplot about the romance between the boy and the girl seems plundered from some long-shelved Roddy McDowell script. But The Man from Snowy River has good qualities, too, including some great aerial photography of thundering herds of horses, and the invigorating grandeur of the Australian landscape.
    • 58

      Christian Science Monitor

      It's kind of fun, and Australians apparently love it, buying enough tickets to make it their country's all-time champ at the box office. But anybody much older than Star Wars - the movie that definitively replaced horses and six-shooters with rockets and ray guns - has seen it all a million times before. [03 Feb 1983, p.18]
    • 50

      The New York Times

      To appreciate it fully, however, one must have a completely uncritical fondness for Kirk Douglas as he acts his heart out in two roles; for picturesque landscapes; for silly plots, and for dialogue that leans heavily on aphorisms too homespun to be repeated in a big-city newspaper.