Fly Away Home

For the novel, see Jennifer Weiner.
Fly Away Home

Directed by Carroll Ballard
Produced by Carol Baum
Written by Robert Rodat
Vince McKewin
Based on Father Goose: One Man, a Gaggle of Geese, and Their Real Life Incredible Journey South (autobiography)
by Bill Lishman
Starring
Music by Mark Isham
Cinematography Caleb Deschanel
Edited by Nicholas C. Smith
Production
company
Columbia Pictures
Sandollar
The Saul Zaentz Film Center
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
  • September 13, 1996 (1996-09-13)
Running time
107 minutes
Country Canada
United States
New Zealand
Language English
Box office $25,143,818

Fly Away Home (aka Flying Wild and Flying Wild, Father Goose) is a 1996 family drama film directed by Carroll Ballard. The film stars Anna Paquin, Jeff Daniels and Dana Delany. Fly Away Home was released on September 13, 1996 by Columbia Pictures.

Fly Away Home dramatizes the actual experiences of Bill Lishman who, in 1986, started training geese to follow his ultralight and succeeded in leading their migration in 1993.

Plot

After her mother dies in a car accident, 13-year-old Amy Alden (Anna Paquin) is brought from New Zealand to Ontario, Canada, by her estranged father Thomas Alden (Jeff Daniels), a sculptor and inventor, to live with him and his girlfriend Susan (Dana Delany).

When a construction crew destroys a small wilderness area near the Alden home, Amy finds a nest of goose eggs. Without Thomas, Susan, or her uncle David (Terry Kinney) knowing, she takes the eggs and keeps them in a dresser in her father’s old barn to incubate. When the eggs have hatched, she is allowed to keep the goslings as pets. Thomas asks for help from local game warden Glen Seifert (Jeremy Ratchford) on how to care for the geese. Seifert comes over to the Alden house, and explains that the geese have imprinted on Amy as their mother. He explains that geese learn everything from their parents including migratory routes, but also warns Thomas that all domestic geese must have their wings pinioned (clipped) to render them flightless, which upsets Amy. Thomas throws Seifert off his property, only for Seifert to threaten the Aldens that if the birds start flying, he will have to confiscate them.

Thomas decides to use an ultralight aircraft to teach the birds to fly and show them their migratory routes, but quickly realizes the birds will only follow Amy. Aided by his friend Barry (Holter Graham), Thomas teaches Amy how to fly an ultralight aircraft of her own, so she can teach the geese. David mentions knowing someone running a bird sanctuary in North Carolina, and arranges for the geese to go to the sanctuary. The birds have to arrive before November 1, or the sanctuary will be torn down by developers who plan to turn it into a coastal housing development.

Thomas (Jeff Daniels) attempts to get the geese to follow him.

Amy and Thomas practice flying the aircraft, but Igor, the weakest of the geese, who has a limp, accidentally hits the front of Amy’s aircraft and lands in an isolated forest. While the group goes off to search for the bird, Glen Seifert returns to the Alden farm and confiscates the other geese. The next day, an elaborate plan is staged to free the geese and start their migration to North Carolina.

Making an emergency landing at Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station in upstate New York on the south shore of Lake Ontario, Amy and Thomas almost get arrested. They become national news, with residents cheering them on and offering the two a place to stay at night at each of their stops. Thirty miles before reaching the bird sanctuary, Thomas’s aircraft suffers a structural failure and crashes in a cornfield; he tells Amy to finish the journey by herself. After Amy takes off and begins to head toward the sanctuary, Thomas hitchhikes to the bird sanctuary. While waiting for the geese, Thomas, Susan, David, Barry and many animal enthusiasts stand up to developers who are waiting to start the excavation of the site.

Amy eventually appears with the geese, much to the joy of the townspeople and Amy’s family, but to the dismay of the developers. The townspeople and the Aldens celebrate their victory. The following spring, all 16 geese safely return to the Aldens' farm on their own.

Cast

Songs

  • "10,000 Miles" performed by Mary Chapin Carpenter
  • "At the Beginning" (End titles) performed by Richard Marx and Donna Lewis
  • "Wherever You Are" (End titles) performed by Mary Chapin Carpenter
An example of an ultralight on display at the Western Canada Aviation Museum to publicize the film.

Production

To recreate the Alden home, principal photography took place in 1995, at two farms near Lindsay in southeastern Ontario. The township had also been the setting for A Christmas Story (1983), and later A Cool Dry Place (1998). The blacksmith shop constructed onsite for the filming of The Last Buffalo at Purple Hill, Ontario was re-used as part of the Alden homestead.[1]

Two gliders were featured in the film: The UFM Easy Riser and the Cosmos Trike. The Easy Riser first appears as a foot-launched biplane hang glider. True to Lishman's real-life saga, modifications were made to improve the design including the addition of a motor and seat. Anna Paquin's character instead flies an A-frame Cosmos Trike with a mock goose head mounted to the noseplate of the airframe and a fabric wing covering painted to resemble feathers. The Cosmos Trike was reportedly chosen for its safety, superior engine power, and increased wing size (a feature that was needed to fly slow enough for the birds).[2]

The four-day trip home for the geese that would take them to Lake Ontario, over the Appalachians to Pennsylvania, Maryland, finally settling on the North Carolina Shores, had principal photography actually filmed nearly entirely at Port Perry and Sandbanks Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada. Additional location shots were the city-fly-through in Toronto, Ontario standing in for Baltimore, Maryland (CGI aircraft).[3] At the conclusion of the production, Lishman led the 60 imprinted "actor-geese" in migration, to winter at the Tom Yawkey Wildlife Center off the coast of Georgetown, South Carolina.[4]

While in production, the film was at first titled Flying Wild but was changed to Fly Away Home just weeks before its release in movie theaters. The original trailer has the title Flying Wild and can be found on certain copies of the Columbia Tri-Star Jumanji VHS Tape[5] and the French version title (L'Envolée sauvage) is the translated version of this title.

Director Carroll Ballard and cinematographer Caleb Deschanel previously collaborated on The Black Stallion and Never Cry Wolf with Fly Away Home being their third family film. Anna Paquin, who plays daughter to Jeff Daniels in Fly Away Home, would later play a love interest in The Squid and the Whale (2005). Upon the release of the Squid and the Whale, Jeff Daniels said that having had the previous experience made the filming a bit awkward for both of them.[6]

Reception

Fly Away Home has mostly positive critical reviews, receiving an 86% approval rating from Rotten Tomatoes.[7]

For a modest budget, Fly Away Home returned US$25 million in the U.S. box office and US$31 million internationally. Audiences and critics enjoyed the evocative, uplifting family-oriented film which also received critical acclaim. Roger Ebert noted: "There are individual shots here almost worth the price of admission...[including] a stunning shot in which the towers of Baltimore materialize from the mist, and office workers see the little girl and her geese flying past their windows."[8] Janet Maslin from The New York Times was similarly effusive, "Mr. Ballard turns a potentially treacly children's film into an exhilarating 90's fable."[9] Gene Shalit on the Today Show called the film "a must see movie".[10]

The uplifting theme of the film was often cited; Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat extolled: "The movie adds excitement and emotion, turning into a celebration of the creative ways human beings and animals can serve, assist, and love one another."[11]

Awards

Caleb Deschanel's visuals received notice and resulted in nominations for the 1996 Academy Awards and from the American Society of Cinematographers. Although unsuccessful in both competitions, Fly Away Home went on to win the 1997 Broadcast Film Critics Association Critics Choice Award as the Best Family Film, the 1997 Christopher Award (for family films), 1997 Young Artist Award in the category of Best Family Feature – Drama, and the 1997 Genesis Award for Feature Films. Anna Paquin was also nominated for the Young Artist Award for Best Performance in a Feature Film – Leading Young Actress (the film was also nominated as Best Family Feature – Drama) and the 1997 YoungStar Award for Best Performance by a Young Actress in a Drama Film.[12]

Home media release

The film was originally released to VHS in December 1996. A DVD release in July 2002, included the exclusive featurette by Bill Lishman, Operation Migration: Birds of a Feather, along with two documentaries: The Ultra Geese and the HBO special Leading the Flock. The DVD also provided a link to Lishman's "Operation Migration" website.[13] A companion CD audio recording of the music featured in the soundtrack was released in 1996.[14] A Blu-ray edition of Fly Away Home was released on April 7, 2009.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Lishman, Bill. "William Lishman- Film." williamlishman.com. Retrieved: May 9, 2011.
  2. "Ultralight Aircraft." williamlishman.com. Retrieved: March 20, 2010.
  3. "'Fly Away Home': Leading the Flock." HBO special, airdate: August 1996.
  4. Lishman, Bill. "Fly Away Home: Behind the scenes." operationmigration.org, 2011. Retrieved: May 9, 2011.
  5. Maslin, Janet. "Overview: 'Fly Away Home' (1996), Alternate title: 'Flying Wild, Father Goose'." The New York Times, September 13, 1996.
  6. "Jeff Daniels' Interview" on YouTube, March 31, 2009. Retrieved: May 7, 2011.
  7. "Fly Away Home (1996)." rottentomatoes.com. Retrieved: May 9, 2011.
  8. Ebert, Roger. "Fly Away Home". Chicago Sun Times, September 13, 1996. Retrieved: March 20, 2010.
  9. Maslin, Janet. "Fly Away Home (1996)." The New York Times, September 13, 1996.
  10. "Fly Away Home (1996)."
  11. Brussat, Frederic and Mary Ann. "Film review: 'Fly Away Home'." spiritualityandpractice.com, 2009. Retrieved: May 9, 2011.
  12. "Eighteenth Annual Youth in Film Awards, 1995–1996." youngartistawards.org. Retrieved: May 7, 2011.
  13. "'Fly Away Home' on DVD." currentfilm.com. Retrieved: May 7, 2011.
  14. "Fly Away Records FLY-CD 79258." Soundtrack Collector. Retrieved: May 9, 2011.

Bibliography

  • Fly Away Home (Special Edition DVD). Culver City, California: Columbia/Tristar Home Video, 2001.
  • Hermes, Patricia. Fly Away Home: The Novelization and Story Behind the Film. New York: Newmarket, 2005. ISBN 1-55704-489-9.
  • Lishman, Bill (as stated). Father Goose & His Goslings (Light Up the Mind of a Child Series). St. Louis, Missouri: San Val, 1992. ISBN 978-1-4176-3444-6.
  • Lishman, William Alwyn. Father Goose: One Man, a Gaggle of Geese, and Their Real Life Incredible Journey South. New York: Crown, 1996. ISBN 0-517-70182-0.
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