Product Details
Man & Boy [VHS]

Man & Boy [VHS]
Directed by E.W. Swackhamer

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #54695 in VHS
  • Released on: 1996-07-09
  • Rating: G (General Audience)
  • Formats: Color, HiFi Sound, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of tapes: 1
  • Running time: 98 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The rugged but properly G-rated Man and Boy gives Bill Cosby (as producer and star) an impressive showcase in a rare dramatic role. Cosby's just right as a former cowboy and Union Army "blue-belly" who, in 1871, must defend his Arizona homestead against resentful white bigots. When his plow horse is stolen, he sets out to retrieve the animal with his 12-year-old son (played by George Spell, one of the finest child actors of the early '70s), and their desert ordeal places them in the crossfire of a long-standing feud between a crazed thief and a vengeful sheriff. The routine plot plays like a Western rehash of The Bicycle Thief, and veteran TV director E.W. Swackhamer handles the action with a generic absence of style. Cosby and Spell make a terrific father-son team, however, while costars Yaphet Kotto and Henry Silva add another element of threat. Solid family entertainment, especially if you're ready to explain horse studding to your children. --Jeff Shannon


Customer Reviews

"Man and Boy:" Cosby's best dramatic role after "I Spy"4
I saw "Man and Boy" on a 7th grade field trip to the old Madison Theater in downtown Detroit. I thought at the time that it had a good Western plot and some good performances, but seeing it again over the years I noticed it was much more than that.

The plot is a deceptively simple one, about a free Black sharecropper (Bill Cosby, in a defiant, tough portrayal) in the post-Civil War West who catches for his son a fine black stallion. When the horse is stolen from the boy (George Spell), Cosby takes him on a quest to recover the animal.

Beautiful Gloria Foster offers great support as Cosby's wife, who is worried about the whole situation but understands and admires her husband's need to teach the boy to stand up for himself. The Cosby character's fierce insistence on personal dignity is partially what has led to the whole thing, and both he and his wife understand the price that must be paid for this.

I hesitate to talk about what Cosby and Spell encounter in their hunt, but there are a couple of key events that have highly informative subtexts about the African-American struggle, both during the days of Reconstruction and in the wake of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement.

Yaphet Kotto plays a former rival for Foster's attentions who mocks Cosby's dignity as foolish pretension, and Douglas Turner Ward turns in what might be the film's best performance as a grizzled, wounded black desperado. Both characters can be read as representing different attitudes taken by certain elements of the black population toward the civil rights warriors of the '60s. Nothing is presented in a pedantic, by-the-numbers way, so the film isn't preachy about its added agenda. But for those who care to pick them up, these subtexts give "Man and Boy" a weight and stature that is superior to "Buck and the Preacher" or any of the other Black-oriented Westerns of the period.

It's great to see "Man and Boy" come to DVD. This is the kind of thoughtful rumination on the Black experience that is all too rare today.

Nicely Done Movie !!5
This film is superbly acted by Bill Cosby in an unconventional role.It's a must see that's very well worth watching by the whole family!!