
The Adventures of Black Beauty
1972 • Action & Adventure, Drama, Family • NR
Black Beauty is a pure black, thoroughbred horse in late 19th Century rural England who is adopted into the household of James Gordon, a local doctor and widower, and befriended by his daughter Vicky, son Kevin, and their friends Albert and Robbie.
Why you should read the novel
Reading 'Black Beauty' by Anna Sewell offers a deeply touching, firsthand experience of a horse’s life, as told through the eyes of Black Beauty himself. The original novel transports readers to Victorian England and immerses them in the challenges, kindness, and cruelties that shaped the lives of horses and their caretakers. Unlike the TV adaptation, the book’s heartfelt perspective encourages empathy, compassion, and a profound understanding of animal welfare, all wrapped in beautifully descriptive and timeless prose.
Adaptation differences
The Adventures of Black Beauty TV series departs significantly from Anna Sewell's book. In the series, Black Beauty arrives at the Gordon family’s home and becomes involved in new, episodic adventures largely unrelated to the events of the novel. The show invents entirely new human characters and storylines, focusing on the lives and dilemmas of the Gordon family, rather than on Black Beauty’s experiences with a variety of different owners as depicted in the original book.
Another notable distinction is the era in which the series is set. While the book was written in the late 19th century and is rooted firmly in Victorian times, the TV show is somewhat ambiguous with its historical setting and deliberately modernizes certain themes and values. This adapts the book’s moral lessons for a 1970s family audience, moving away from the specific social justice issues, like the treatment of horses in urban environments, that Sewell addressed.
Additionally, Black Beauty’s narrative voice plays a central role in the novel. Anna Sewell gave the horse his own first-person viewpoint, enabling readers to understand his feelings, hopes, and fears. The TV adaptation abandons this narrative device, choosing instead to tell its stories through human characters and treating Black Beauty more as an important family pet than as the focal narrator.
Finally, the book is structured around Black Beauty's changing circumstances with various owners, highlighting themes of animal welfare and the impact of human kindness or cruelty. The series, however, keeps Beauty with one family and introduces lighthearted, self-contained dramas, creating a very different tone and scope from the episodic, often hard-hitting journey found in Sewell’s beloved classic.
The Adventures of Black Beauty inspired from
Black Beauty
by Anna Sewell