Friday Night Lights Movie Review
Friday Night Lights Review

"Friday Night Lights" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Peter BergProducer : Brian Grazer
Screenwiter : Peter Berg,David Aaron Cohen
Starring : Billy Bob Thornton,Derek Luke,Tim McGraw,Lucas Black,Garrett Hedlund,Lee Thompson Young
When the lights come on at the 20,000-seat Ratliff Stadium, the city of Odessa,
Texas shuts down. Streets are deserted and stores close early so that everyone
can crowd onto the sparse campus of Permian High School to cheer on their
Panthers. In this small, barren town, Friday night football is bigger than life.
Based on journalist H.G. Bissinger’s best selling book, Friday Night Lights
examines the craze surrounding the team’s bumpy road to the 1988 state
championship. For these players, excelling at football is the only ticket out
of their dilapidated desert town. All of Odessa’s residents are motivated to do
their part to help get them out. Players are pushed to the breaking point on
the field by driven coaches, and equally pressed off the field by their
win-obsessed parents. At the local burger joint, players eat for free, heed
words of advice, and pose for pictures with fans.
Under the watchful eye of second-year coach Gary Gaines (Billy Bob Thorton),
the season once again looks promising. But, when their superstar running back
Boobie Miles (Derek Luke) goes down with a severely injured knee in the season
opener, the unimaginable happens: The team starts losing. Gaines is immediately
criticized on local radio, and chastised publicly for building the Panther
offense around one player. With very few alternatives, Gaines turns to the team’
s quarterback Mike Winchell (Lucas Black), third-string running back Chris
Comer (Lee Thompson Young), and tailback Don Billingsley (Garrett Hedlund) to
shoulder the load.
The remainder of the season is a struggle, and yet, because of the tireless
dedication and desire the Panthers have to overcome their problems on and off
the field, they make the impossible possible. FNL remarkably captures the heart
and spirit of its players, the pride of their parents, and the uncompromising
addiction of its fans. All are relentless in their pursuit to make Permian High
better than perfect.
Director Peter Berg scores touchdowns for his ability to accurately capture the
intensity and fervor of the gridiron. The film’s gritty look, along with
cinematographer Tobias Schliessler’s dizzying handheld camera shots, make us
part of every hard-hitting tackle. We’re never just watching from the stands;
we’re in the middle of the action, and in close-ups so realistic we actually
fear the linebacker that’s ready to pummel our ass. Off the field, Schliessler
widens-out his camera to find soft, quiet pink and amber sunsets and desolate,
wind-swept one-road plains. The West-Texas desert never looked so beautiful.
Despite all of the passion conjured up on screen, surprisingly we feel little
of this emotion in the audience. While Berg does an amazing job placing us in
the middle of the action, strangely, we never feel connected to these players
as fans. This is because FNL keeps us at an unfair distance that really never
allows us to know the players. We only scratch the surface of Winchell’s
struggles with his estranged mother, the constant beatings Billingsley gets
from his drunken father (Tim McGraw), or Boobie’s reluctance to watch from the
sidelines.
When the film’s big finale arrives, we find ourselves too far away from the
edges of our seats. And in that moment, when the big play should mean the most
to us, we’re quickly tackled for a loss of yards.
The DVD includes 20 minutes of deleted scenes, commentary from Berg and writer
Buzz Bissinger, and some making-of footage.
Hut two!
Reviewer: David Levine





