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Iron Will

Iron Will

6.687

1994

108 min

Adventure

Family

Action

When Will Stoneman's father dies, he is left alone to take care of his mother and their land. Needing money to maintain it, he decides to join a cross country dogsled race. This race will require days of racing for long hours, through harsh weather and terrain. This young man will need a lot of courage and a strong will to complete this race.

Iron Will

6.687

1994

108 min

Adventure

Family

Action

When Will Stoneman's father dies, he is left alone to take care of his mother and their land. Needing money to maintain it, he decides to join a cross country dogsled race. This race will require days of racing for long hours, through harsh weather and terrain. This young man will need a lot of courage and a strong will to complete this race.

Cast

Mackenzie Astin

Will Stoneman

Kevin Spacey

Harry Kingsley

Brian Cox

Angus McTeague

David Ogden Stiers

J.W. Harper

August Schellenberg

Ned Dodd

Rex Linn

Joe McPherson

John Terry

Jack Stoneman

Ron Winters

Spirit Guide #2

Richard Riehle

Burton

George Gerdes

Borg Guillarson

Jeffrey Alan Chandler

De Fontaine

Michael Laskin

Simon Lambert

Reviews

r96sk

@r96sk

4 years ago

You're telling me James MacArthur and Mackenzie Astin aren't related? I'm not even joking, they looked exactly the same in their respective youngers years; I thought I was back in 1950s Disney when I saw Astin appear. 'Iron Will' is a good film. It begins quite slowly but soon enough picks up the pace thanks to the dog-sled racing, which I enjoyed alongside the newspaper and animal parts of the story. The stuff, meanwhile, with Will (Astin), McTeague (Brian Cox) et al. isn't majorly interesting to me, but it still makes for alright viewing. Astin is more than decent in the lead role, while Kevin Spacey is (unfortunately) solid in his role as media man Kingsley. With that noted, it isn't really a film that is set alight by its cast. They all serve their purpose but aren't anything great. The animals, racing and hearty narrative make up for that though. A fine film, even if it does just narrowly avoid 3*.