![]() Shelly (Alexa Nisenson) runs away from home and ends up at Ben Crowley's (John Voight) farm and she bonds with a horse she later names Orphan. This was a Hallmark-style "feel good" movie that had some heart, but went overboard on the sentiment at the end. ![]() The film's ending may have been a tad bit far-fetched, as a nice cop and Ben's daughter Caroline get married, then adopt the entire batch of abused kids. The photography captured the verdant landscape of Kentucky and the quaintness of Midway, a town in which the train runs straight down the middle of Main Street. But the strength of the film was in the scenes with the horse, as trained by Ben and Shelley. The rest of the cast was admirable in their roles. Jon Voight was perfect in the role of Ben Crowley. Young Shelly runs away and sleeps in the barn of old Ben Crowley, who discovers right away that Shelly is a natural when it comes to training horses. ![]() A pair of cardboard-cutout villains have adopted a large brood of children, then abuse them like characters out of a Charles Dickens novel. The theme of orphans abounded in the film. The story focuses on the bonding of the orphan child with an orphan horse, as well as the lessons learned by the old Scrooge. He is mad at the world and despised in his community until he meets a young runaway child who is a natural horse whisperer. "Orphan Horse" is a touching story about a cantankerous old horse trainer in Kentucky.
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