Category Archives: Sports

Minding the Gap

Minding the Gap              4 stars

The documentary Minding the Gap takes us to the streets of a working-class neighborhood in Rockford, Illinois where new filmmaker, Bing Liu, puts on display the skateboarding tricks that he and his young friends have mastered. Liu has been collecting footage of his two friends, Zack and Keire since he was eleven and has put their stories together with his own on film. But this is not a movie just about skateboarding. It highlights the lives of these young men in their twenties as they have come of age from childhood in what is described as one of the most crime ridden small cities in America, Rockford, Illinois. The filming was done over several years documenting events in their personal lives. All three subjects grew up in abusive families and in at least one case, have continued that behavior in their own adult relationships. Zack, who is white, is the father of Eliot and is trying to maintain a relationship with the boy’s mother, mostly unsuccessfully. Keire, the only African American had an abusive relationship with his father who has passed away. And Bing, the Asian filmmaker reveals that he and his mother were beaten by his mother’s boyfriend who has also died. The film brings us in close contact with the struggles of the poor working class in America as they grow up and leave childhood behind. In this case we see how the simple sport of skateboarding provides an outlet for these young men. I am glad that Liu was inspired to bring this subject to the screen. The movie was featured at Sundance in 2018 and was nominated for the Best Documentary Academy Award the following year. I encourage you to look it up.

King Richard

King Richard       4 stars

If you want to see another inspirational sports movie then go see King Richard, directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green and written by Zach Baylin. But the movie is more than that as it is also about the unwavering belief and determination of Richard Williams, father of future tennis stars Venus and Serena Williams. Will Smith portrays Richard, the girls’ father who has a written plan for his two daughter’s success and will not accept defeat even in the face of the odds against them, coming from the streets of Compton in the early 1990’s. Even though we know what the eventual outcome is, stardom in the all-white tennis world for two young black women, the obstacles facing them appear all too real. Richard works with the young girls on run-down neighborhood tennis courts while having to fight off the young men of the streets threatening them and forces his way into meetings with the white coaches who are needed for the girls’ success. Richard tells a lot of stories of his growing up in a world of racial prejudice with a father who would not look out for him. (The movie does not even include the worst of it.) He is determined not to have this experience repeated on his daughters. Fortunately, there is also a mother, Brandy (Aunjanue Ellis) who looks out for their interests and calls out Richard when he tries to go too far without consulting her. The white coaches are perplexed at Richard’s insistence that the girls be pulled from the junior tournament circuit when he sees how the parents of the other girls are treating their daughters and the resulting behavior as spoiled brats. Of course the movie would not be the success it is without Will Smith’s convincing acting performance as the father who won’t take No for an answer. He is deserving of the acting Oscar he received (despite all the ceremony controversy). This sports movie delivers with the expected climactic competitive scene as is the tradition, but the focus shifts from the father to daughter Venus when she faces the best in the world. The movie is available on HBOMax.

Creed III

Creed III               4 stars

Creed III finds Adonis Creed (Michael B. Jordan, returning as the star but also directing) retired from his world championship and now the owner of his own boxing gym ad quite well off with his music producer wife Bianca (Tess Thompson) and young daughter. It is the third in the series and the first that his mentor, Rocky Balboa does not appear in. The story starts with the young teenage Adonis at a group home with his buddy Damian who is making it in the boxing world when things take a bad direction and the two of them get caught up in an act of violence. Skip ahead about eighteen years and Creed is preparing world champion Felix for his next title match when a figure from the past, Damian (Jonathan Majors) appears at his door. Having just gotten out of prison, it soon becomes clear that Damian is interested in more than getting reacquainted with his boyhood friend. He has dreams of reaching his goal of becoming a champion and will stop at nothing to get it including exploiting Creed’s feelings of obligation toward him a well as cheating in the ring. Creed is warned that trouble awaits if he follows this path, but that matters little to him. Tragic events follow in a movie that is also about race in addition to being a boxing film. It is about two connected lives that took very different paths because of a single event involving young black men and the justice system. Inevitably, the film goes to the final confrontation between the two fighters in a showdown of a fight that is filmed like it is disconnected from the real world around them. The fight scenes are not as good as in the first Creed movie, but how could they be? That was a legendary film. The events surrounding these two characters may seem implausible in the real world making it quite a stretch, but it is entertaining to see these two talents and very well-conditioned actors performing together.

The Iron Claw

The Iron Claw     4 ½ stars

“Mom tried to protect us with God. Pop tried to protect us with wrestling.” These are the words of Kevin Von Erich speaking of how his father, Fritz Von Erich drove his sons to be successful in the professional wrestling arena, but ultimately as we discover to tragic results. The movie The Iron Claw, by Sean Durkin (Martha Marcy May Marlene and The Nest) is about the real life Von Erich family, the kings of professional wrestling in Texas in the eighties. The movie is inspired by the lives of Fritz, the father of the clan (Holt McCallany), oldest son Kevin (a muscular Zac Efron like you’ve never seen him before) who is filled with drive to be the best but is haunted by what he sees as a curse on the family, second son David (Harris Dickinson), the tall lanky blond who tag teams with Kevin, third son Kerry (Jeremy Allen White who you will recognize from The Bear (also Law & Order)) who left a career in track and field for the chance to join his brothers in the ring and finally Mike (Stanley Simons) who saw himself as a country musician; that is, until he too joined his brothers in the ring. The movie is about a family of wrestlers, but it is also about the firm grip of control that Fritz had over his sons, wanting them to be the best and earn the championship belt that eluded him in his wrestling career. “The Iron Claw” is the name of Fritz’s signature move, the use of his hand to squeeze an opponent’s head until they surrender, but it also symbolizes the way he controls his family including his wife (Maura Tierney) who must watch the destruction of the family as they pursue pop’s dream. (Fritz is not going to win any parenting awards with his approach.) The actors, especially Efron obviously had to work up their physique and train hard to wrestle to make this movie. The action in the ring looks as comical as the real thing to me. There is some reference to the staging that is done in pro-wrestling, it being the best performers that end up being champion, so I have no doubt that it looks as real as possible. Unfortunately for the Von Erich family the tragedy that befalls each is only too real as well. The effect on Kevin is devastating as we watch his descent into depression. This is probably Zac Efron’s best performance to date. (We should forget about 2015’s We Are Your Friends.) “The Iron Claw” is far from an upbeat movie and you should be prepared to shed some tears. But it does deliver its message about being loyal to one’s family no matter what.

The Boys in the Boat

The Boys in the Boat                       2 ½ stars

Director George Clooney who brought us such movies as Good Night and Good Luck,
Leatherheads and The Monuments Men returns to the director’s chair for a feel-good
underdog sports movie in The Boys in the Boat. This true story about an
eight-man rowing team from the University of Washington that competed in the
1936 Berlin Olympics and won a gold medal for the US is based on the
bestselling book by the same name. It follows the team through their struggles
during the depression, focusing mainly on rower Joe Rantz (Callum Turner of
Emma and Fantastic Beasts) who was abandoned by his father at age 14 but is
trying to stay in school to earn an engineering degree. Joe and the others are
drawn to the sport primarily based on the promise that is a guaranteed paying
job for those who make the team. The team coach (Joel Edgerton: Loving, It
Comes at Night, Boy Erased) has a vision of success with the young men of the
junior varsity team at U of W and tells them they are competing in the most
difficult sport in the world. While I agree that this is a story worth learning
about, the movie becomes one sports movie cliché after another. You can insert almost
any sport into the plot, whether it is boxing, basketball, track and field,
tennis or horse racing and you will have basically the same movie. (But not
golf. There is no sport in movies more boring than golf.) You have the grueling
workouts, the early spark of talent, the belief in greatness, the setbacks (in
this case the challenges from the administration against the junior team, the
need for raising more funds to go to Berlin) and the final heart pounding
competition. In this case we even get the appearance of Der Feurer at the final
event who is there to see the triumph of the Germans over the other teams. The coxswain,
Bobby (Luke Slattery) shows some real personality as he shouts encouragement to
the team when they are racing. But otherwise, these athletes seem like bland
copies of one another in their scenes together. There is an amusing romance
when a former classmate (Hadley Robinson) tries to get Joe’s attention and you
would almost expect a musical number out of a thirty’s movie to break out.
There were some nice touches like the aerial shots of the boats in steady
rhythm and the moving grandstands on a train that follows the course of the
race. The movie is good as a comfortable sports movie, but empty of any
surprises.

Ferrari

Ferrari                   4 stars

There is a lot of heat and noise coming from the fast cars on the roads of Italy in Michael Mann’s new movie Ferrari about the man behind the sports car company that bears his name. There is also a lot of heat being generated off the track too coming from Ferrari’s wife, Laura (Penelope Cruz in one of her finest performances) who is unhappy with her place in her marriage to Enzo Ferrari (Adam Driver). This auto racing movie set in 1957 does concern competition between drivers of the world’s fastest machines on land, Formula One race cars, but it is also about the challenge Ferrari is facing, trying to save his company from bankruptcy while also keeping his life with his mistress, Lina (Shailene Woodley) secret from his wife. Early on we see what Laura is capable of as her fiery temper leads her to fire a gun, nearly hitting Ferrari. There is no hiding her feelings as only Cruz can show. She is still hurting from the death of her only son who died one year before that she blames on Enzo. But Ferrari needs to accommodate Laura as she controls most of the automobile company. The company is not selling enough sports cars to keep it afloat, but if one of its race cars can defeat Maserati in the famous Mille Miglia, the thousand-mile race across the hills of Italy, then it will be possible to sell many more of the expensive cars and save the company. Ferrari must also convince the right investor to help finance his venture so he must manipulate them into seeing things his way. You can see that Enzo has a lot on his mind. The movie viewer has a lot on his mind too as there is a lot of drama going on when not on the racecourse. Of course, there are plenty of exciting scenes of the race cars hurtling around the track and competing against each other on the road around hairpin turns through the countryside. I can’t imagine how it was possible to film scenes like this, but they are thrilling. There is no hiding the hazards of the sport in this era as is shown by some very graphic scenes that will silence the audience. Adam Driver displays his usual intensity, though not exploding with rage like he has in other roles. He keeps a subdued presence, but you can imagine him boiling beneath the surface as Ferrari maintains control over how the drivers are to handle the cars in the race and deal with a hostile wife at home. We don’t really get to know the drivers well, other than one who is especially eager to win at all costs. Patrick Dempsey portrays Piero Taruffi, the most experienced driver who has somehow survived to an advanced age for racecar drivers. There are some interesting things to see from this time, such as cars that carried two passengers and how the occupants sometimes have to work on a disabled car during a race to get it running again. There is so much packed in the two-hour plus running time that by the end of the race it is almost immaterial who the winner is. The movie is not for everyone, but anyone with a passing interest in auto racing should see it. As well as any fans of the talented Penelope Cruz.

Nyad

Nyad                     4 stars

It is Oscar season which is certainly clear from the number of A list actors that
have put in some notable performances in recent months. Certainly among them
are the two women appearing side by side in the true story of endurance swimmer
Diane Nyad simply called Nyad. Four-time Oscar nominee Annette Bening has the
title role of the woman who failed in her first attempt to swim from Cuba to
Florida, a distance of 103 miles in the open ocean in 1978, but then had the
vision to take up the challenge again at the age of 60. Jodie Foster has the
role of Bonnie Stoll, Nyad’s lifelong friend and coach who volunteers to be
with her to realize her dream to be the first to accomplish this seemingly
impossible feat. What stands out the most in this “biopic” is the close
personal bond this pair has, especially when they go toe to toe at each other
in highly emotional scenes. Add to this, a third character, their navigator,
John Bartlett (Rhys Ifans) who adds to the drama during the film’s many
harrowing moments. The film is the work of the pair Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi
and Jimmy Chin who have worked primarily on documentaries like Free Solo in the
past. Over the film’s two hours we get a steady dose of the challenges this
small group faced that include storms, a swift moving current, cold
temperatures, hallucinations and attacks from sharks and box jellyfish. We also
get a lesson in some of the science involved in such a feat of human endurance
such as the nutrition needed, the equipment used to defend from sea creature attacks
(Nyad did not use a shark cage) and the navigation methods employed. An
important element is the encouragement from Bonnie she gives to Nyad during
moments of disorientation and confusion. The scenes have a very real sense to
them. Interspersed throughout the movie are actual footage of Nyad’s first
attempt at the swim when she was 28 and flashbacks to her childhood and time
with her father. The movie may seem predictable at times, but it is made
memorable by the performances of Bening and Foster, both of whom are well above
the age of most women having major roles in movies today. It’s rare to have two
in the same film and rarer still to have two with Academy Award Acting
nominations at the same time which is true for Nyad.