Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (1993) Poster

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6/10
For the whole family
rbverhoef29 December 2003
Two dogs named Chance (voice by Michael J. Fox) and Shadow (voice by Don Ameche) and a cat named Sassy (voice by Sally Field) are left behind when the family that owns them goes on vacation. They are not sure what happened and therefore they have to find the family. An incredible journey is what is next.

This is a movie for all ages but especially kids will love this. The animals, the beautiful nature, some nice and funny moments, a good heart and a happy ending, everything what a movie for the whole family needs. Of course the story is simple and some events are quite impossible, but with movies like this you are not suppose to ask too many questions and you must not be too critical.
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One of my favourite animal movies ever!
horsecrazy67918 May 2005
I was very young when I first watched this movie, and I love it just as much today as I did then. The main idea of "Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey" is three pets, Shadow, a wise old golden retriever, Chance, a goofy, fun-loving American bulldog puppy, and Sassy, a hilarious Himalayan cat who are left in the care of their owners' friend that lives hundreds of miles away on a farm. After several days, the pets begin to worry. Thinking that their owners must be in some kind of trouble, they set out on their adventure home.Along the way they encounter many unexpected surprises but their determination and love for their owners helps them in finding their way. For me, this was an unforgettable story of love, courage and devotion that will inspire everyone who watches it. A must see for animal lovers! I give it a 10!
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7/10
Tearjerker from beginning to end
princessstrickland2131 August 2018
If you are a dog (or cat) lover, this movie is for you. It made me laugh, smile and even cry. I would watch it with your furry companion, and believe me you would want to watch it with them till the end
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7/10
It's Reigning Cats and Dogs
Hitchcoc29 December 2016
This is a story of three animals who become lost and must make their way back home. There is a cat, Sassy, who is mouthy and annoying. Chance, an immature, careless, reckless dog. And Shadow, the mature, well traveled voice of reason. Of course, these animals talk to each other. Two of them are determined. One, Chance (who lives up to his name) gets careless and overly adventurous, putting the others in danger. Shadow is an optimist. He believes sincerely that they will eventually be found and returned to their families. It's a good story and the voices are superimposed. They are not made to talk with some twisted mouth, to look like humans. This is a great movie for children. It is about love and compassion and commitment to an ideal. It also expresses the idea of never giving up.
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7/10
Very well done.
thousandisland26 March 2001
Great voices, lots of adventure and clever dialogue make this a very good movie. The addition of "character" to the three lead animals gives the story a lot more depth and meaning, particularly the relationship between the older fellow, Shadow, and the young hellraiser, Chance. The earlier versions of this film were unable to give the animals any real personality or motive, which is done perfectly here. Sally Field is lovable in anything, but really shines in this film as the proud feline, Sassy. Great contrast between cat and dog perspectives on life, and just the right amount of spirit and warm fuzzies to make the plot and resolution excellent. There's even an uplifting score and beautiful mountain scenery. Definitely perfect for an evening alone or with the kids. Hats off to Disney.
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9/10
Charming and beautifully filmed movie!
TheLittleSongbird6 May 2009
First of all, I loved Bruce Broughton's music score, very lyrical, and this alone added to the film's charm. The best aspect of the movie were the three animals, superlatively voiced by Michael J.Fox, Sally Field and the late Don Ameche. Whereas Fox has the funniest lines, Ameche plays a rather brooding otherwise engaging character(the voice of reason), and Field adds wit into a character that is always seen telling Chance off. The humans weren't as engaging, and sometimes the film dragged, but that is my only complaint. This is one beautiful-looking film, with beautiful close up shots of Canada, I believe. Although the film itself is quite long, there is never a seriously dull moment, and this is advantaged by the voice work and a well-written script. All in all, a charming and perhaps underrated film, with a 9/10 from me. Bethany Cox.
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7/10
This is the good version of all those straight-to-video talking animal abominations.
matthewssilverhammer6 April 2022
I was pleasantly surprised at how well it holds up. Undeniably, there is some corniness and distracting human performances on the surface. However, the script, voice actors, child-friendly humor, and emotionally effective ending all just plain work.
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10/10
one of my top 10 favorites!
Denny10 July 1999
This movie is definitely on the list of my top 10 favorites. The voices for the animals are wonderful. Sally Field and Michael J. Fox are both brilliant as the sassy feline and the young inexperienced pooch, but the real standout is Don Ameche as the old, faithful golden retriever. This movie is a great family movie because it can be appreciated and loved by children as well as adults. Humorous and suspenseful, and guaranteed to make every animal lover cry! (happy tears!)
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7/10
Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey
oOoBarracuda12 August 2016
Any time you settle in for a talking animal movie, one never knows how cheesy of a movie they are in for. Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey, the 1993 feature by director Duwayne Dunham was not plagued by some of the common problems in talking animal movies. The two dogs and a cat who make the incredible journey to find the owners they think have abandoned them, are well-written and given interesting enough personalities for the audience to get engaged in their stories and sit at attention with them until the very end. Setting out to find their owners and the only home they've ever known, the animals learn a lot about love and comradery along the way.

Life is good for Shadow (Don Ameche), Chance (Michael J. Fox), and Sassy (Sally Field). Both dogs and the cat are cared for and loved incessantly by their wonderful attentive owners. After their owners marry and their family grows, something unusual happens. They notice a lot of suitcases and they go to a strange place. Unbeknownst to them, Bob Seaver (Robert Hays) has gotten a researching job in San Francisco and will be temporarily locating the family there until his project is done. Leaving the animals at a friend of their female owner's, the family leaves with promises misunderstood by the animals of returning for visits. Perplexed at their loving owner's abandonment, Shadow is convinced a mistake has been made and encourages the dogs to follow him in an attempt to find their owners. Traversing the rough and wild terrain proves more than the animals anticipated, and soon wonder if they will be safe and loved ever again.

The visuals in Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey were strikingly captivating, much grander and more beautiful than I expected from a children's movie. The establishment shots in the beginning especially, were breathtaking capturing the true wilderness the animals would have to endure. Watching a family movie, one expects a decent amount of clean packaging, which did occur in Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey, it is easily forgiven however because the creatures were so well-written. It was fun to follow along with the main characters despite them not being human. Talking animal films are usually in a class by themselves as far as cheesiness. Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey doesn't suffer from such cheese, however. I believe, a large reason why Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey is so tolerable is because the animals mouths don't move in sync with their dialogue. I always thought that the synced mouth movements and dialogue was a peculiar choice for filmmakers of talking animal movies. The decision makes it no more believable that animals are actually talking simply because their mouths move like human's when they speak. A few brilliant filmmaking decisions, a beautifully shot film, and a perfect ending scene make Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey the perfect film from one's childhood with their own blossoming families.
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10/10
One of the most Heart-Warming Funny Lovable Films About Animals EVER!!
Spiderman32612811 January 2004
Maybe I'm a sap but this is the sweetest movies ever! I saw it for the first time when I was around 4 or 5, and I cried my eyes out. Between then and now (embarrassed at age 15) I have seen it over 25 times and have sobbed each and every one of them. Don't worry they're tears of happiness! And it's not all sap! There's a lot of humor and comedy in it too. Usually the whole talking animal thing can be a huge drag but in this movie it's not the case. My only word of advice: Even if you love this-Don't see the sequal...cornyness! I suggest everyone checks this out...you won't be sorry, no matter how old or young you are!
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5/10
Lively but inferior remake
soymilk12 May 2005
In a way, watching 'Homeward Bound: the Incredible Journey' was like a milestone in my own personal viewing experience - it was the first time, that I can remember, I found myself settling down to see a remake of a movie I was already well-familiar with. I was still in primary school when this film hit the screens, but already I knew every scene and character of the charming 1963 classic 'the Incredible Journey' pretty much off by heart. It was a simple but engaging storyline which followed a trio of household pets - an elderly dog named Bodger, a young dog named Lua, and a cat named Tao - as they embarked on a remarkable 200 mile trek across the North American wilderness to be reunited with their owners, learning how to fend for themselves, encountering hostile local wildlife, and maintaining a good close-knit bond with each other all the way.

This 90s update follows much the same route, with latter day critters finding themselves in a similar situation and enduring all the obstacles that their forerunners did before them (bears, rivers, porcupines, wild cats), with the odd tweak here and there. The main difference being that they themselves have been given significant makeovers in mind-set, moniker and vocal chords - this time round, Shadow, Chance and Sassy, as they're now known, all sport human voices and, unsurprisingly, more human dispositions. This being a pre-Babe talking critter flick though their mouths don't actually move along with the dialogue being uttered, having it pasted instead on top of their filmed behaviours, a technique which looks more convincing in some scenes than others. And, as good as much of the voice work itself indisputably is (Michael J Fox's charisma never wanes), I'm afraid I have to disagree with most of the comments before me that it actually enhanced their story or characters in any way. Sure, Lua, Tao and Bodger of the original didn't speak, but then again they didn't need to. The animals playing them were expressive and entrancing enough on their own, and had a true naturalistic charm in the sense that they were so believable as a threesome of innocent beings wandering through an environment considerably more vast and intimidating than the one they're used to. They may have lacked the ability to express it in words, but it was evident just how devoted they were to both their owners and each other. Sassy, Chance and Shadow, meanwhile, are more outspoken, but this same unifying sense of friendship and affection is something which they certainly don't pull off. Perhaps because the duration of their journey is marked by so much taunting and bickering amongst themselves, which in turn makes them a tad less appealing as characters - the spitefulness always present in the way that Chance and Sassy interact with each other is especially distracting.

The fundamental flaw of 'Homeward Bound' isn't really in the talking itself (which always had the potential to be very charming), but that it rarely uses it as anything more than an opportunity to crank up the comedy…which comes mostly from anal fixations and a harmless but wearisome debate about which of the two species is superior (or rather, which one 'rules' while the other 'drools'), along with lashings of silly lightweight slapstick on the side - basically, things which didn't really bother me the first two or three times I saw it, but which started to grate big time as I got older (as opposed to the infinitely more mature original, which has never outworn its welcome). The fact that one of the dogs has a full understanding of who Arnold Schwarzenegger is probably doesn't help their case.

Missing also from this mix is not only the bulk of the original's warmth, but much of the darkness and poignancy too - if anything, the story has been distinctly softened up for this particular telling. While its predecessor was never afraid to get ugly in its depiction of the perils of the natural world that our heroes were fording, 'Homeward Bound' chooses instead to play them up for whatever amusement value they might have - the river-crossing mishap, very fortunately, remains a serious matter, but their confrontations with other animals are sorely lacking in the same bite as before (the way in which Chance and Shadow here deal with a cougar on their trail is embarrassingly cartoony and childish).

In the end, what we have here is a lively but pretty routine family film for its decade, and which, as a remake, falls way short of the charm, the adventure and indeed the flavour of its forebear. It will no doubt amuse its intended audience, and I suppose that's half the battle already won. More demanding viewers though will be better off with the genuine article, which trumps it on all counts.

Grade: C
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Very Nice Family Movie
ccthemovieman-14 October 2006
Robert Hays and Kim Griest play normal human beings while Sally Field, Michael J. Fox and Ameche are voices of animals. All of them combined to make a nice family movie here, and a pretty successful one at the box office.

There are many funny lines given to Fox to read as the main character, the dog. Field also has a good lines as the cat while Ameche plays it straight as the mature Golden Retriever.

The only somewhat-bothersome character is the 13-year-old boy who is impatient and pouty at times, but he gets out that after awhile.

The scenery is nice, too, with photographers doing a fine job capturing the beauty of California's Sierra mountain range.

All in all, a very nice movie and highly-recommended for one of those 'family nights.'
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7/10
Fun Movie to Watch with Others
MayuMG30 April 2020
-Fun characters and interactions. -Pretty suspenseful moments, -Fun adventure.

-Seemed to drag on a little long.
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7/10
Improves on the original
r96sk25 September 2020
It improves on the original, that's all you want from a remake.

I just about, marginally, liked the 1963 film, whereas I actually did comfortably enjoy 'Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey'. The animals are as adorable in this as they are in the first film, with more definitive care taken for them - that's not, arguably, the case in the '63 production.

The premise is changed up in some areas, there's a scene that proceeds the conclusion which is rather nice and isn't in the other. The whole feel of this is more engaging, helped by the fact that it gives the animals a voice which works better than just a sole narrator; as was done in the 60s.

Michael J. Fox is a strong choice for the voice role of Chance, while Sally Field and Don Ameche are solid in their roles as Sassy and Shadow respectively. Those three help make this a fairly enjoyable 84 minutes.

Another positive thing is the locations, with some wonderful shots of the environment that the animals traverse through. Overall, a good film - nothing more, nothing less.
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10/10
Wonderful
rogue_McGregor2 August 2005
I watch this movie all the time. I've watched it with family ages 3 to 87, and everyone in between; They all loved it. It really shows the true scenes a dog has, and the love and loyalty you get from a pet. Just beautiful.

It's great for thoes who love comedy movies, the tear-jerker movies, or even just pets.

The music is wonderful, the animals spectacular, the scenes truly thought out, and the characters perfect. What I liked about the characters is the true and nicely mixed personalities: Shadow (The oldest, a Golden Retriever) He's the wise one, filled with the wisdom and mindset of any dog, Chance (the American Bulldog puppy) is basically a puppy with a witty side, the comical character; And Sassy (The Hymilayan cat) She's the real cat who shows what a real cat will do for their owner, the real girly one.
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7/10
better than the lion king
dxmmi17 April 2022
U cannot disagree because u will be wrong so u are repulsive exiled in society therefore reducing the societal construct of the bible and my sincere egotistical nature@armin van holms.
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10/10
Never get tired of this gem
UniqueParticle1 March 2020
I absolutely love Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey always delightful experience! So much cuteness packed into a dangerous and wonderful exploration so much greatness for an animal film! I even get goosebumps at some of it. The cast is perfect for it too.
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7/10
Enjoyable film for all the family- especially animal lovers
JamesHitchcock9 February 2009
I haven't seen the original "Incredible Journey" since I was a child, so I can't really compare the two versions. This version tells the story of three animals, two dogs and a cat, whose owners leave them with friends in the countryside when the father of the family has to take a new job in San Francisco. The pets, believing that they have been abandoned, escape and set out on a long homeward journey through wilderness.

This story might have been most easily filmed as a cartoon, but both versions are in fact live-action films made using real animals. One major difference is that in the later version the animals speak in human voices, giving each its own distinct personality, something that was not done in the original film. (A similar device of talking animals has been used in other recent children's films such as "Racing Stripes"). Some critics have been rather sniffy about the use of this device, but my own view is that giving the animals distinctive personalities of their own helps to strengthen the film rather than weaken it. The animals were voiced by big-name stars, Don Ameche, Michael J. Fox and Sally Fields.

Both dogs are male, and their relationship parallels that between many humans in "buddy-buddy" movies. Shadow, a golden retriever, is the wise, experienced older dog; Chance the younger one is brash, cocky and impulsive. To British eyes Chance looks like a boxer, but is actually an American Bulldog, which is apparently a different breed to its British cousin. Sassy the cat is female with a rather prim and proper personality. She is very proud of her status as a cat, which in her eyes makes her vastly superior to any mere dog. ("Cats rule, dogs drool!").

From an adult viewpoint the film has a number of faults; it can be sentimental, some of the incidents (such as the one in which the animals manage to catapult a mountain lion into the river) are quite incredible, and the human characters are all completely forgettable. This, however, is a film which is mainly aimed at children, and I suspect they will enjoy it immensely. Certainly, any animal-loving child will do so. (Comments by some professional critics such as James Berardinelli, who complained that the animals' voices lessened the film's "grandeur", only serve to strengthen my view that professional critics are not always the best guides to children's movies. I doubt if many playground conversations about "Homeward Bound" concentrated on its supposed grandeur).

One thing adults will appreciate is the photography of California's Sierra Nevada mountains. They may also appreciate the film's blend of humour and excitement as the runaway pets encounter perils such as bears, mountain lions and porcupines in the wilderness. This is a very enjoyable family film. 7/10
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10/10
This movie makes me cry every. single. time.
cricketbat21 November 2020
This movie gets me every single time. I've seen Homeward Bound many, many times, and I always get teary-eyed at the end. This is one of those rare talking pet movies where the voice actors and the on-screen animals are both worthy of praise. Plus, you can tell some actual care went into the writing and the filmmaking. The humor is clever, the story has heart, and this film is definitely one I recommend.
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I loved it!
Monika-511 October 2000
What a fun movie! I enjoyed the locales, scenery, and just had a ball when I saw it several years ago in the theater. Now my family owns the video. Chance, Sassy, and Shadow are adorable animals and are voiced perfectly by Michael J. Fox, Sally Field and the beloved late actor Don Ameche. I also loved the family and felt they were played very realistically. I especially loved Robert Hays as the gentle stepfather who wants to do right by his new stepkids. If you're looking for good, clean, solid and funny family entertainment, you can't go wrong with Homeward Bound.
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6/10
La la la...
natashabowiepinky13 April 2014
"Home, with my thoughts escaping home, with my music playing home, where my love lies waiting silently for MMMEEE..." Um sorry, just having a 'moment' there. Don't worry Mr Doctor, I'm still taking the meds.

Lets talk about the movie, shall we? We all love pets, right? Well, apart from goldfish. No one likes them. They're B-O-R-I-N-G. Or perhaps I feel that way because of flashbacks from my many uncomfortable hours spent in a dentist's waiting room. *Feels Dentures*. SWEETS ARE JUST TOO GOOOOD. Oops, going off track again. Time for a double dose...

I'm back. Much calmer now. Yes, this is all about two dogs who get the wrong end of the stick (ho ho), along with a cat when they are temporarily left at a ranch while their family relocates. Thinking they've been abandoned, they run off to begin a perilous trek through the wilderness to find their owners. Encounters with bears, waterfalls and mountain lions are guaranteed, along with plenty of infighting from these very different species.

Yes, of course... what with this being Hollywood, one of the canines is an old, loyal, sensible stick-in-the mud (Coincidentally, this happens to him at one point) and the other is a young, irresponsible, hyperactive ball of fun. I shouldn't need to tell you about the feline. In Movieland, they have but one default setting: Sarcastic, self-obsessed, sneaky narcissists. Hey, I love it. Reminds me of someone...

Together, they brave the elements, overcoming whatever obstacles cross their path... and of course, discovering that co-operation and friendship is key to their survival. It's Disney, whadya expect?! We hear LOTS of jokes about the various stereotypical views the creatures have towards each other, including one too many butt sniffing gags for my liking. It's all in good fun though, and certainly more palatable than coming from the mouth of say, Adam Sandler.

The animal training is top notch... how they managed to line-up the four legged cast to do so many scenes together with absolute unity is a marvel all on it's own. It's not quite Babe, but mostly seamless nonetheless. Their many adventures will err towards kids, but don't think we as adults would be immune to it's charm. If you don't get a warm glow at the very last scene... then I don't wanna know you. Although some would say that isn't such a bad thing... 6/10
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6/10
It's been done better
spenrh18 May 2019
I love animals. I love cats and dogs, birds and bears, and I love lambs and sheep. I love films about animals if done in certain ways, one example being "The bear" (1989) which showed the life of a bear cub growing up in the Canadian Rockies, through his eyes. And a cat and dog film that I loved was "The adventures of Milo and Otis". It showed the adventures of a cat and dog with many heartwarming moments, and without having to add wisecracking and sometimes annoying voiceovers such as in the cat and dogs in "Homeward bound".

I don't know what exactly caused me to watch an old copy of "Homeward bound" again, I guess it's because I love animals. And this movie had some good parts, but the animal films that I mentioned in my first paragraph are definitely better films. "Homeward bound" copies too much from the "Look who's talking" movies with the babies/toddlers' voice-overs that some people found so cute and hilarious while I just couldn't quite share their enthusiasm. One problem with the "Look who's talking" movies and "Homeward bound" in my opinion is the over exaggerations of the voice-overs. One example was whenever "little Mikey" in "Look who's talking" and "Look who's talking 2" cried, Bruce Willis' voice-over had to keep whining "oohhh!! ooohh nooo!! ooohhhh!!" along with it, something I found a little annoying. There are similarities to that style in "Homeward bound", particularly with Michael J. Fox's voice-over with the dog, Chance. One example is when Chance is trying to squeeze under a fence and Fox's voice has to be going "ooooh god!! ooohhhh nooo!!! ooohhhh!!! ooooohhhhh!!!". I'm sorry, but Fox's voice-over was annoying, not just his whining but also many lame puns of his like "you got up on the wrong side of the litter box", and saying overly excitably "Aaahhhh!! It's Birdzilla!!" when seeing a turkey. And other dumb lines like "I'm too pooped to poop". The "dogs rule and cats drool" line also got old fast, and the same line reversed was also said by the cat Sassy (Sally Field) to Chance, but she wasn't as irritating as Fox's Chance. The one pet character that I liked was the dog Shadow voiced by Don Amache with his wise and noble character voice-over, the least irritating of the 3 pets. Then there's the animal shelter with the catcher chasing the movie's pet heros escaping, and the catcher looking all mean and crazy. I'm sure that was just to make the shelter look like a mean horrible place. None of the staff at the shelter told the pets that their family was coming for them, and that wasn't because they wouldn't talk to the animals. They certainly were talking to them, such as the guy chasing them. They just didn't tell the pets their family was coming so the pets would have the excuse to escape and become lost again, because it was too soon for the movie to be over. In real life, I actually can picture shelter workers telling animals there "don't worry, your family's coming for you" if those animals' owners were coming.

Now I did give the movie 6 stars, because there were some good things in it. There was the family's loyalty to their pets, the oldest son's bond with the faithful Shadow, and I liked the addition of "Airplane!'s" Robert Hays as the father, who also cared for their pets. I liked the scene with Shadow trapped in a muddy ditch and sadly but bravely telling Chance and Sassy "it's time for you to go on without me", that kinda tugged at the heartstrings. Also touching was a scene with a little girl lost in the woods with the lost pets keeping her company and safe, and then a tearful reunion with her parents finding her (sitting with the pets) after searching with a search party through the woods all night. Another touching part was seeing Sassy drowning in a river and temporarily being separated from Chance and Shadow, and then turning up ok and bringing heartwarming relief to the 2 dogs.

Overall, a movie with both annoying and very good parts.
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10/10
Da Da Batdog!
Darkside-Reviewer4 April 2020
I first saw this movie when I was just 9 years old on a Sunday afternoon watching TV with my family nothing was on so we sat and watched a movie about animals getting lost in the wilderness and since then this movie has been a big part of my life some of my fondest memories are of me and my family watching this movie together with our pets my sister with her cat Smokey my mum with her cat Lucky and me with my dog Sheba the movie made us laugh and cry every single time I'm now 30 years old and sadly our best friends have passed away in that time but we all have countless pictures and memories with them and whenever I'm sad, lonely, upset or am missing my pets I watch Homeward Bound and it makes me smile again with a few extra tears from the sad parts of the movie that still make me cry over 21 years and about a hundred viewings later.

The movie follows three animals an old wise dog named Shadow (Don Ameche) a young energetic pup named Chance (Michael J Fox) and a smart and cunning cat named Sassy (Sally Field) the three are left on a farm while their human family are away for a few months but after waiting for them the trio decide that it's been to long and they will find them instead so they travel through the mountains and wilderness looking for home and their family on a huge and dangerous journey that will test their friendship as they journey together to make it home.

The voice acting for the animals is brilliant and very well done especially considering it's human voices for animals the scenery is absolutely stunning the animals who star in the movie are some of the most well trained animals ever put to film and you can really see that the people who made the movie really cared for these animals and treated them all with love and respect it's heart-warming.

This is a perfect family movie and is enjoyable for both kids and adults who love animals I highly recommend watching this movie and it is now available on Disney+ so it's easy to find and watch.
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7/10
Disney at its best
cosmic_quest4 May 2006
We've all heard stories about loyal pets who traverse hundreds of mile across unknown territory to be reunited with their beloved owners. 'Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey' is a heart-warming film based upon these poignant stories and is an example that Disney can produce films that are warm without condescending too much into being cavity-inducing.

In this film, we follow Shadow, the old wise Golden Retriever; Sassy, the snotty and ladylike cat, and Chance, the rambunctious bulldog pup, who are temporarily left on a small farm while their three child owners relocate to a new city with their parents. When they are not claimed within a couple of days, the pets fear a terrible fate has befallen the children so they escape and travel across America to return to the side of young owners.

On the backdrop of some beautiful scenery of America, we witness how the animals can express incredible bonds of loyalty to each other and their human owners and their determination that drives them on. You really empathised with these characters even if they did have four legs and a tail! And the ending would melt even a heart of stone with owners of older pets being left with a warm glow.

I have to admit that I love this film as much now as I did when I first saw it aged twelve. It reminds me so much of my own pets: my first dog Toby being the wise Shadow, my snobby cat Fifi definitely fitting of Sassy and the two youngest dogs Kasey and Jake the wee pup vying to be youthfully, energetic Chance. Toby, Fifi and Kasey have since gone over the Rainbow Bridge but this film never fails to strike a chord in reminiscing over them.

'Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey' is one of the few Disney films that will appeal to the smallest of kids to grannies in their eighties. Highly recommended to animal lovers out there and folk who love to hear stories of amazing animal bravery.
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10/10
This movie rules!
michael-gillanders119 February 2004
Homeward Bound is a beautiful film. Y'know the part where Shadow falls down the ditch... thingy, I *cried*, considering I was only six, I cried! it takes a lot to make me cry! The dogs and the cat are excellently trained. A nice family movie, *not* for completely hardened non-fluffy people or animal-haters but could for soft-as-crap a.k.a. people like me.

A good film overall, 10/10!
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