Genre:
Drama
Director: Phil Joanou
Cast: Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson,
Xzibit, Kevin Dunn, Leon Rippy
RunTime: 2 hrs
Released By: Columbia TriStar
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.sonypictures.net/movies/gridirongang/
Opening
Day: 18 January 2007
Synopsis
:
Columbia Pictures' Gridiron Gang tells the gritty
and powerfully emotional story of juvenile detention camp
probation officer Sean Porter (Dwayne "The Rock"
Johnson), who, along with another officer, Malcolm Moore (Xzibit),
turns a group of hard core teenage felons into a high school
football team in four weeks. Confronted with gang rivalries
and bitter hatred between his teammates, Porter teaches some
hard lessons (and learns a few himself) as the kids gain a
sense of self-respect and responsibility.
In
a world where 75% of these juvenile inmates return to prison
or meet with violent ends on the streets, Porter and Moore
face seemingly insurmountable barriers. No one wants to compete
against convicted criminals, but through relentless pursuit
and a jolt of inspiration, Porter and his team fight their
way to redemption and a second chance.
Based
on a true story, Gridiron Gang sends out a message that one
man can make a difference and the most hopeless kids in our
society can change the course of their lives through hard
work, commitment and bold leadership.
Movie
Review:
Based on a little watched but fondly remembered Emmy winning
documentary of the same name, “Gridiron Gang”
is a mega-macho Hollywood remake that follows all the steps
of a successful uninspired inspirational sports movie down
to a tee. There’s hardly any room to deviate its prototypical
underdogs from its own preceding inspirations of urbanised
youth caught in a spiral of gangs and overt violence while
secretly yearning for a way out. Its relentless but effective
use of formula makes this remake an appropriate star vehicle
for the “most electrifying man in sports entertainment”.
Dwayne
'The Rock' Johnson is Sean Porter, a juvenile detention facility
officer that wants to curb the 75% recidivism rate that plagues
the system by introducing a sports initiative (in this case
football, the American kind) into the centre that allows the
belligerent and highly volatile teenagers to interact as united
teammates instead of opposing gangbangers. There’s no
doubt that the film aims to give kind-hearted but tough-minded
social workers a rise onto a pulpit while almost to the point
of ringing bells and crying out that the “system does
in fact work!” but only when given the right attention
and if apathy is given a swift kick to its behind. Its rah-rah
sentimentalities are given a greenlight to work through its
trite dialogue that hollers out its idealism from the rafters
while basically ignoring its impractically simplistic idea
of curing social ills by letting us know that there’s
no I in team.
This
film does carry a brass set of cajones in its portrayal of
boys becoming men but its limited commentary on class, economic
and racial divides does little more than peek out from the
bylines and is more often likely to be benched in place of
hackneyed melodrama involving the temptations of ganglife
or yet another rousing speech that’s really neither
here nor there. In this respect, its loyalties lie clear,
as it’s more “The Longest Yard” than it
is “Friday Night Lights” or “Remember the
Titans”.
But
holding it all together is Dwayne Johnson. He earns his acting
stripes here and discards any sort of past association with
wrestling, and hopefully his stage name in future as well.
It almost seems a role that would have been tailored for him
if there weren’t already a Sean Porter who lived and
breathed the role. Johnson has a phenomenal physical presence
that grounds him with the misfits, the bureaucrats and in
the gridiron. He sells to us the idea of team activities that
displaces the neglect in the chaotic lives of these economically
handicapped youths with teamwork and mental discipline. His
work in progress is indeed a work in progress, as he understands
it. But by shaping a backstory for Sean Porter, “Gridiron
Gang” is able to have at least one well-rounded character
in its multi-arc approach.
Yes,
cynicism will be a hindrance if the “Gridiron Gang”
is to work its effortless charms but its not all smiles and
championship playoffs for the gang. As true life often is,
its adapted screenplay is a carrier of bittersweet one-offs
and sadness.
Movie
Rating:
(Massively formulaic but forges a great connection with its
star)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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