The writing is tame and the plot is plodding and oversimplified, even for a kids movie.
Home on the Range (2004)
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Reviews Counted:117
Fresh:64
Rotten:53
Average Rating:5.7/10
Consensus: Though Home on the Range is likeable and may keep young children diverted, it’s one of Disney's more middling titles, with garish visuals and a dull plot.
Theatrical Release:Apr 2, 2004 Wide
Box Office: $49,887,802
Synopsis: Life is at its best for the happy animals at "Patch of Heaven," a "pretty as pie" dairy farm way out west owned by a kindly lady named Pearl. Seldom is heard a discouraging word except perhaps from... Life is at its best for the happy animals at "Patch of Heaven," a "pretty as pie" dairy farm way out west owned by a kindly lady named Pearl. Seldom is heard a discouraging word except perhaps from Jeb, a cantankerous old goat who thinks every tin can belongs to him. In her unofficial role as barnyard boss is Mrs. Caloway, a fastidious British cow with an air of authority and a stylish straw hat. Grace, the younger cow, is wide-eyed, a bit naïve, and has a penchant for new age thinking.The farm's other inhabitants include a colorful assortment of pigs, chicks, and ducks. This idyllic life is shaken to its core by two major events. A sassy show cow named Maggie (three time winner of the Golden Udder Award and the original Happy Heifer) comes to live at the farm when her owner's land is foreclosed and she finds herself in need of a new home. Shortly afterwards, Sheriff Brown, on his hotshot horse Buck, arrives to tell Pearl that "Patch of Heaven" is set to go on the auction block in three days unless she comes up with a payment of $750. Maggie proposes that the animals could win some Blue Ribbon prize money at the upcoming county fair, and suggests the three cows mosey into town to convince Buck to help them get more time. Mrs. Caloway sees Maggie as an outsider and is reluctant to leave Pearl, but ultimately agrees to go along with the plan. In town, Maggie, Mrs. Caloway and Grace learn about a $750 reward being offered for a notorious cattle rustler named Alameda Slim. They decide to pursue the desperado themselves and collect the reward money in order to save the farm. Buck refuses to help the girls, and sets his sights instead on assisting his hero, a mysterious champion bounty hunter named Rico. When Rico chooses Buck to be his horse, the ambitious horse champs at the bit to ride into action. Meanwhile, the three cows attempt to find Slim by hitching up to a chuck wagon that is headed to a cattle drive. Their plan pays off, but the wily cattle rustler sends all of the cattle into a hypnotic trance with his trademark yodel before Maggie and the gang can stop him. Luckily, a tone-deaf Grace is unaffected and manages to save her two traveling companions while Slim makes off with the rest of the herd. Rico arrives too late to catch the slippery varmint, and ends up dumping Buck in favor of a more reliable horse. The cow trio can't seem to catch a break, and getting caught in a turbulent flash flood leaves them wondering, "will the sun ever shine again?" Their luck changes with the arrival of Lucky Jack, a onefooted rabbit who turns out to be a Jack-of-all-trades. When he reveals that his home at Echo Mine has been taken over by a yodeling cattle rustler, the girls set out with a new sense of purpose. At the mine, Slim outlines his master plan to his knuckle-headed nephews, the Willies, and prepares to sell off his hijacked cows to a shifty cattle broker named Wesley. Maggie, Grace and Mrs. Caloway arrive on the scene and set into motion a daring plan to de-rail Slim. Things seem to be going their way until Rico makes an appearance and reveals a few surprises of his own. Slim escapes and heads for the "Patch of Heaven" auction. It is the last parcel of land he needs to complete his real estate kingdom and exact his revenge on the homesteaders who failed to appreciate his genius for yodeling. Buck finally sees Rico's true colors and joins the girls as they make a last ditch effort to save the farm. With the odds firmly against them and time rapidly running out, the stage is set for a final confrontation with Alameda Slim. -- © Disney Pictures [More]
Starring: Judi Dench, Jennifer Tilly, Roseanne Barr, Randy Quaid
Starring: Judi Dench, Jennifer Tilly, Roseanne Barr, Randy Quaid, Cuba Gooding, Steve Buscemi, Charlie Dell
Director: Will Finn
Director: Will Finn
Screenwriter: John Sanford
Composer: Alan Menken
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
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Release:
Sep 14, 2004
Reviews for Home on the Range
Roseanne Barr, our narrator, introduces Maggie with 'That's me. I'm a cow.'
Disney's western cartoon comedy may be the first film to require cortisone treatments from jamming its elbow in the audience's ribs so often.
An uninteresting saga without a smidgeon of creativity that peddles revenge and heroism based on egotism is not our idea of fun fare for families and little children.
Old-style animation slows down after a snappy start, but it's lively enough to keep kids from fidgeting too much.
Directors Will Finn and John Sanford season their script with sight gags that go off like corn popping and wisecracks crisp enough for family consumption, if just light enough on the salt.
It sounds silly. And it is. But much of the movie's charm comes from its embracing the silliness.
Keeps milking the same gags and throwing the same bull, and after a while you feel cowed watching it.
Witty and self-assured, Home on the Range ranks as one of Disney's better efforts.
The sort of Disney product that would be more at home on the tube or the video shelf than the big screen...at best an okay time-killer.
The film skews young, to be sure, and it isn't as memorable as the new Disney classics of the early 1990s, but there's still plenty here to hold the interest of viewers of all ages.
Insistently -- and constrictedly -- pocket-size, an adventure for families who've decided on local travel for their next vacation.
Doesn't rise above anything you’re likely to see on an average Saturday morning.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 15% 15% | The Ugly Truth |
| 98% 98% | Up |
| 36% 36% | G.I. Joe: The Rise of … |
| 52% 52% | The Taking of Pelham 1… |
| 45% 45% | Ice Age: Dawn of the D… |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
| 68% 68% | Funny People |
| 25% 25% | Four Christmases |
| 45% 45% | Shorts |
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