Introduction
Sports has been a great forum for the movie industry. Whether movies have been
based on true events or fictional and pulled out of nowhere, they have always
brought an element of excitement and suspense.
Grab some popcorn and peanuts, huddle in front of the television, and enjoy one
of these sports movies this season.
Rocky

Director John G. Avildsen's Rocky is the stand-up-and-cheer saga of Rocky Balboa
(Sylvester Stallone) an underdog boxer who gets his million-to-one shot at love
self-respect and the world heavyweight title. Rocky is a down-on-his-luck
Philadelphia southpaw who works at a meat-packing factory while fighting at a
local club. He's given the chance of a lifetime when the world heavyweight
champion Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) chooses him as an unlikely opponent in his
championship bicentennial fight. What was originally planned as a publicity
stunt becomes a chance for Rocky to prove himself as a prizefighter while
training with his cantankerous manager Mickey (Burgess Meredith) to rise to the
challenge. Thrilling scenes of Rocky's arduous training including his
unforgettable run up the Philadelphia Art Museum steps are interspersed with a
sweet and touching love story between the fighter and his best friend's shy
sister Adrian (Talia Shire). With the love of Adrian on his side Rocky struggles
to overcome the odds fighting with all his heart in the glorious and brutal
finale. Shot with gritty realism on the mean streets of Philadelphia, Rocky
introduced a new American cinematic hero spurred on by rollicking action
sequences and a rousing soundtrack. A triumph for star and screenwriter Stallone
who himself came from nowhere to reach the top Rocky is crowd-pleasing
entertainment at its finest.
Hoosiers

One of the most rousingly enjoyable sports movies ever made, this small-town
drama tells the story of the Hickory Huskers, an underdog basketball team from a
tiny Indiana high school that makes it all the way to the state championship
tournament. It's a familiar story, but sensitive direction and a splendid
screenplay helped make this one of the best films of 1986, highlighted by the
superb performances of Gene Hackman as the Huskers' coach, and Oscar nominee
Dennis Hopper as the alcoholic father of one of the team's key players. As the
drama unfolds we come to realize that many of the characters (including Barbara
Hershey as a schoolteacher with whom Hackman falls in love) are recovering from
disappointing setbacks, and this depth of character is what makes the otherwise
conventional basketball story so richly rewarding. This is a quintessentially
American movie about beating the odds and rising above one's own limitations.
Just try to watch it without cheering!
A League of Their Own

Penny Marshall's popular 1992 comedy sheds light on a little-known chapter of
American sports history with its story of a struggling team in the All-American
Girls Professional Baseball League. The league was formed when the recruiting of
soldiers during World War II resulted in a shortage of men's baseball teams. The
AAGPBL continued after the war (until 1954), and Marshall's movie depicts the
league in full swing, beginning when a savvy baseball scout (Jon Lovitz) finds
a pair of promising new players in small-town Oregonian sisters (Geena Davis,
Lori Petty). The sisters are signed to play for the Rockford Peaches near
Chicago, whose new manager (Tom Hanks) is a former home-run king who wrecked his
career with alcoholism. They're all a bunch of underdogs, and Marshall (with a
witty script by Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel) does a fine job of establishing
a colorful team of supporting players including Madonna and (in her movie debut)
Rosie O'Donnell. It's a conventional Hollywood sports story (Marshall's never
been one to take dramatic risks), but the stellar cast is delightful, and the
movie's filled with memorable moments, witty dialogue, and agreeable sentiment.
And just remember: there's no crying in baseball!
Rudy

A young man learns to let nothing stop him from realizing his ambitions in this
drama, based on a true story. Ever since he was a little boy, Rudy Ruettiger
(Sean Astin) has dreamed of attending Notre Dame University, and playing on the
Fighting Irish football team. However, Rudy's dream doesn't seem very practical;
Daniel (Ned Beatty), his father, works in a steel mill and can ill afford to
send his son to Notre Dame, while Rudy's grades are not especially impressive,
and standing a shade over five feet tall and weighing a little over 100 pounds,
Rudy is hardly built for the gridiron. However, with the help of Father
Cavanaugh (Robert Prosky), a sympathetic priest, Rudy is admitted to nearby Holy
Cross, and in his junior year manages to squeak into Notre Dame as a transfer
student. Rudy works as an assistant to the football stadium's groundskeeper,
Fortune (Charles S. Dutton), to pay his tuition (often sleeping in Fortune's
office since he can't afford a room), studies diligently, and appears at tryouts
for the football team. Rudy is made a member of the practice team, which means
he's little more than a human tackling dummy, but Coach Ara Parseghian (Jason
Miller) is impressed with Rudy's devotion and determination, and pledges that
he'll allow him to dress for one game before he graduates, so his name can be
recorded as an official member of the team. However, the arrival of a new coach
and a tough season that allows for few unnecessary players may put a stop to
Rudy's dreams within sight of the finish line.
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