Spokane Tack Trunk
Serving Spokane since 1987. We offer the very finest for you and your horse - from English to Western - Show Ring to the Trail - we've got you covered!
05/30/2026
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1FDJ2Qe2BK/
In the spring of 2004, Viggo Mortensen arrived at the Hollywood premiere of his new film in the rain. He was not in a limousine. He was not walking a red carpet. He was on horseback — sitting atop a Paint stallion named TJ, who had spent the last several months working alongside him on one of the most visually stunning adventure films of the decade.
When a reporter asked him about TJ that night, Mortensen quipped: "He was nice enough to invite me tonight. I'm his date for the evening."
It was a joke. It was also, somehow, the most honest thing about the whole production.
The film was called Hidalgo. Released by Touchstone Pictures on March 5, 2004, with a budget of $100 million, it told the story of Frank T. Hopkins — a half-Sioux American cowboy and dispatch rider who, in 1891, was invited by an Arabian sheikh to enter a legendary 3,000-mile endurance race across the desert called the Ocean of Fire. Hopkins would ride Hidalgo, his mixed-breed mustang, against the finest purebred Arabian horses ridden by the best Bedouin riders in the world. The ultimate underdog story.
The film was marketed explicitly as "an incredible true story."
There was one significant problem. The Saudi Arabian Government officially announced that the Ocean of Fire race has never actually happened. Westport Library
Equestrian historians at the Long Riders' Guild had been raising alarms even before the film opened. They gathered more than 50 curators, criminologists, and equestrian experts to examine Frank Hopkins' memoirs — the source material on which the entire film was based. Their conclusion was stark: there was no evidence that there was ever an Ocean of Fire race, no record that Hopkins was ever associated with Buffalo Bill, and no proof that Hopkins ever even rode a horse. Village Preservation
The controversy grew loud enough that Touchstone Pictures quietly removed the "based on a true story" claim from its early marketing — and then, apparently deciding that boldness was the better strategy, reinstated it in the final release not just as "based on a true story" but as "an incredible true story." SpyScapes
The film opened to mixed reviews and barely recouped its production budget at the box office, earning $108 million against the $100 million it cost to make — before even accounting for marketing expenses that typically equal the production budget. By Hollywood standards, it lost money.
But here is what gets lost in the historical debate.
The actual horses in the film were not mustangs at all. Five American Paint horses — a recognised breed distinct from wild mustangs — were trained and selected to play Hidalgo. Each had a specific role. TJ did most of the tight close-up shots, including the scene where Hidalgo threw a blanket over his owner during a locust infestation. Another horse, RJ, handled the most agile trick sequences. Oscar was the most comfortable horse for the actors to ride during extended scenes. Discolypso
And throughout all of it, Viggo Mortensen was there — doing the work himself.
He did not ask a stunt double to take his place in the saddle. He rode ba****ck, fell off at a gallop, and jumped onto moving horses during production. He worked with trainer Rex Peterson and stunt coordinator Mike Watson to prepare, and he rode all five of the Paint horses that portrayed Hidalgo across the course of filming. He had grown up around horses as a child and brought that comfort and familiarity into every scene. Discolypso
The connection he built with TJ was the real one. Not the Ocean of Fire. Not Frank Hopkins. Not the 3,000-mile race across the Najd desert.
Just a man and a horse, doing an honest day's work together, every day, for months.
When filming ended, Mortensen bought TJ outright and brought him home to New Zealand. He also purchased two horses from the Lord of the Rings films — Uraeus and Kenny, the horses he had ridden as Aragorn — giving them a permanent, comfortable home rather than leaving them behind when the productions ended.
And then he rode TJ to a movie premiere in the rain, made a joke about being his date, and somehow captured everything worth remembering about the whole experience in a single gesture.
The crowd who had gathered to catch a glimpse of the actor were stunned when he arrived atop his mighty steed. He dismounted, did interviews in the rain, and posed for photographs with TJ at his side. No drama. No pretence. Just a man who had made a real promise to a horse and intended to keep it. Wikipedia
The film asks you to believe in an underdog — a mixed-breed horse proving himself against pureblooded champions on the other side of the world. It is a beautiful idea, even if the historical record does not support it.
But the real underdog story behind Hidalgo is quieter than that. It is five Paint horses trained to be one character. It is an actor who did his own riding in the rain and the sand because he thought the horses deserved a co-star who showed up properly. It is a stallion named TJ who flew to New Zealand after the cameras stopped rolling, because the man he had worked with decided that was the right thing to do.
Hollywood told a story about loyalty and partnership and refusing to abandon what matters.
And then, just off camera, Viggo Mortensen actually lived it.
~Old Photo Club
05/23/2026
We got new pads in
Arma Smart Jump Saddlecloth #90028 $59.99
And
Arma Lite Saddlecloth #2590 $29.99
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Category
Contact the business
Website
Address
11515 E Trent Avenue
Spokane Valley, WA
99206
Opening Hours
| Monday | 11am - 3pm |
| Tuesday | 11am - 3pm |
| Wednesday | 11am - 3pm |
| Thursday | 11am - 3pm |
| Friday | 11am - 3pm |
| Saturday | 11am - 3pm |