Old Yeller (G)
Tearjerker is one of the best early Disney dramas.
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- Studio: Disney
- Directed By: Robert Stevenson
- Cast: Dorothy McGuire, Fess Parker, Jeff York
- Running Time: 84 minutes
- Release Date: 01/01/1957
- Video/DVD Release Date: 05/07/2002
- Genre: Drama
- MPAA Rating: G
Parents need to know
Families can talk about why Travis doesn't want Old Yeller at first. Why doesn't he want the pup? How does he hurt Elsbeth's feelings? Why does Katie say, "No wonder they didn't want him on no cow drive" about Elsbeth's father? Why did Sanderson trade Old Yeller for the toad and a meal? Why did Sanderson say "that's the way a man talks" when Travis told him that he was a little scared but would take Sanderson's advice? What made that "manly"?
Message
Social Behavior:
Consumerism:
Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco:
Violence
Scary confrontations between Old Yeller and a bear, wild boars, and a wolf.
Sex
Language
Common Sense says
What's the story?
Reviewed by Nell Minow
In 1869 Texas, Jim Coates (Fess Parker) leaves his family for three months to sell their cattle, and tells his older son, Travis (Tommy Kirk) to take care of his mother, Katie (Dorothy McGuire) and his younger brother, Arliss (Kevin Corcoran). When a stray dog comes to their farm, Arliss "claims" him, over Travis' objections. But Old Yeller turns out to be an outstanding dog and pal for Travis. When Old Yeller saves Katie from a rabid wolf, Travis is faced with the hardest decision of his young life.
Is it any good?
OLD YELLER is a touching tale. The scene when Jim returns, as Travis and his friend Lisbeth are burying Old Yeller, is particularly meaningful. Jim tells him that the loss of Yeller is "not a thing you can forget. Maybe not a thing you want to forget. ... Now and then, for no good reason a man can figure out, life will just haul off and knock him flat. … I'll tell you a trick that's sometimes a big help. Start looking around for something good to take the place of the bad."
Jim's talk with Travis is a model of parental wisdom, understanding, and patience. He accepts and validates Travis' feelings completely, and does not try to minimize or talk him out of them. (Contrast that with Lisbeth, who tries to comfort Travis by encouraging him to "come to like the pup.") Instead of telling him what to do, he says, "I'll tell you a trick that's sometimes a big help," letting him decide for himself whether to take the advice. Travis was not just reluctant to adopt Old Yeller at first -- he was downright hostile because of the loss of his first dog, Belle. That, at the end of the movie, he is able to accept Young Yeller more easily shows how much he has grown up.
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