Sunday, July 3, 2011

Secretariat


Secretariat

2010

Director Randall Wallace

Writers: Mike Rich and William Nack

123 Minutes

Some 37 years ago, a horse named Secretariat won the Triple Crown by 31 lengths and a run time of 2:24. He was the greatest horse that ever lived. And though it bares the name of this film, this story is not about a horse. It’s about a woman.

Penny Chenery.

Often times, women have to face the men in their lives. Penny Chenery (Diane Lane) knew that all too well. She came from a strong family, married a strong man, and when her family’s horse ranch came under fire, she was quick to be strong and save it. Yet, saving the farm meant challenging every men she ever met, right down to her own flesh and blood.

Patriarchal oppression.

It was a troubled time for the Cherney family, but they had a winning horse. Secretariat was named Horse of the Year and won sixteen individual races overall. Penny Chenery knew how special this horse was. She knew his history. She knew his potential, even though the men in and around her life questioned her to the bitter end.

She beat them all.

In the scene above, Penny has returned to her farm and asked about the sale of one of their horses by Trainer Earl Jansen (Graham McTavish). His plan was the sell this prized stallion to another farm, where then they would sell it for double its value.

When Penny questions him again, Earl talks down to her like it was her first time in a stable. But, she knows what she’s talking about. She knows the horse game. And she knows this trainer is a fraud and fires him on the stop.

This is the first test of many. For Penny, it was her against every man in the horse racing game. It was her against her father’s friends, trainers, other owners, siblings and even her husband. Everyone questions her. She even questioned herself.

Yet when it came to those three minutes, when Secretariat ran his race, no one was more right in the world than Penny Chenery.

She proved everyone wrong, rising above the rest like her house always did.

It was different times back then, but this world continues to need strong women like Penny Chenery. We need people to stand up for what they believe in, even when the world is telling you to give up.

We need the fight in folks.

Had Mrs. Chenery quit, we never would have known of a horse named Secretariat and the largest winning margin in horse racing history.

31 lengths. My god...

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