A sheep rancher's visit to the big city triggers a mischevious adventure with his teenage computer-whiz grandson.A sheep rancher's visit to the big city triggers a mischevious adventure with his teenage computer-whiz grandson.A sheep rancher's visit to the big city triggers a mischevious adventure with his teenage computer-whiz grandson.
Photos
Adam Logan
- Owen Spratt
- (as Adam Stradlin)
Mike Booth
- Agent Collins
- (as Michael Booth)
T. Mychael Rambo
- Hearse Driver
- (as T. Michael Rambo)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSheila Schafer ("Lady in Diner"), actual resident of Medora, North Dakota, has one line in Wooly Boys (2001) with Peter Fonda. Sheila has coincidentally stated that her husband, Harold Schafer, who restored Medora in 1964, had one line as an extra in How the West Was Won (1962) with Henry Fonda.
- GoofsAll entries contain spoilers
- SoundtracksShipwrecked in the Eighties
Perfomrmed by Kris Kristofferson
Featured review
Released to2001, "Wooly Boys" stars Peter Fonda and Kris Kristofferson as two aging sheep ranchers in the Badlands of North Dakota. After the former pays a visit to his daughter (Robin Dearden) in Minneapolis, he brings back his city-bred 16 year-old grandson (Joseph Mazzello). Keith Carradine plays a country sheriff, Rosanna DeSoto a ranch hand and Michael Booth an FBI agent. Jad Mager and Adam Logan are on hand as troublemakers while T. Mychael Rambo plays a hearse driver.
This dramedy focuses is on the conflict-habituated friendship of the two older ranchers and the visiting teen being a fish-out-water in the wilderness, which brings to mind 2003's "Secondhand Lions." At around the 30-minute mark there are several laugh-out-loud scenes, which are less frequent throughout the rest of the movie. The lines of the idiotic FBI agent are the best. Beyond this, the cast and authentic North Dakota locations are great, but the movie's mediocre about half the time. For instance, the kid responds to Kristofferson's character in one scene and it's wholly unconvincing. A top-of-the-line movie would re-do the scene or ad lib; whatever it took to make it work. So it's one of those part good/part meh movies, but I think the good makes it worthwhile, like the laughs, the birthing scene, the cast and the ND locations.
The film runs 99 minutes and was shot in Fryburg, Beach & Medora, North Dakota, and Minneapolis.
GRADE: C+
This dramedy focuses is on the conflict-habituated friendship of the two older ranchers and the visiting teen being a fish-out-water in the wilderness, which brings to mind 2003's "Secondhand Lions." At around the 30-minute mark there are several laugh-out-loud scenes, which are less frequent throughout the rest of the movie. The lines of the idiotic FBI agent are the best. Beyond this, the cast and authentic North Dakota locations are great, but the movie's mediocre about half the time. For instance, the kid responds to Kristofferson's character in one scene and it's wholly unconvincing. A top-of-the-line movie would re-do the scene or ad lib; whatever it took to make it work. So it's one of those part good/part meh movies, but I think the good makes it worthwhile, like the laughs, the birthing scene, the cast and the ND locations.
The film runs 99 minutes and was shot in Fryburg, Beach & Medora, North Dakota, and Minneapolis.
GRADE: C+
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $335,726
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $49,374
- Jan 25, 2004
- Gross worldwide
- $335,726
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