Gridiron Gang Movie Review
Gridiron Gang Review

"Gridiron Gang" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Phil JoanouProducer : Shane Stanley,Michael I. Rachmil,Ryan Kavanaugh
Screenwiter : Jeff Maguire,Jac Flanders
Starring : Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson,Xzibit,Jade Yorker,Setu Taase,Trever O'Brien
Wanna know why sports movies are criticized for being too cliché? Because
sports, as a whole, are too cliché. We’ve been trained to root for the
underdog, though it's conventional when that come-from-behind victory is shown
on screen. Teams are expected to win games on last-play drives. How is a
filmmaker supposed to wring suspense from such a scenario when it happens every
night on SportsCenter?
For a sports film to succeed on its own terms, audiences must be able to look
beyond the requisite storytelling crutches that bolster this limited genre and
find something else worth discussing. In Gridiron Gang, that extra something
else is heart, which this flick has in spades.
Gang follows the biographical story of Sean Porter to the letter – footage of
the real coach played alongside the end credits shows him barking actual lines
we heard minutes before in the film. Charismatically intimidating Dwayne "The
Rock" Johnson personifies Porter, a juvenile correctional facilities counselor
who uses football as a means to unite his divided charges.
Gang plays as a junior varsity Longest Yard, with hardened teenage criminals
learning to shelve their street-bred differences and play together as a team.
It shows these kids at rock bottom so we can best appreciate how Porter and his
program brings them back up.
Instead of one game against the guards, these kids shoulder a full season
against polished private squads. Rock wears many hats both on the field and off
– counselor, coach, bouncer, mentor, friend – and each one fits him like a
glove. The wrestler continues to find projects that utilize his physical
assets, as well as his rugged charm.
The underdog formula gets the better of director Phil Joanou (State of Grace),
who pushes our buttons hard but manages to motivate without fully manipulating.
He could stand to trust his audience more than he does. Most can figure when to
stand and cheer without obvious cues from Trevor Rabin's desperate score. Also,
Joanou adores slow-motion photography for his in-game shots. Not one or two
shots, but every single frame of football action. If these sequences were
played at full speed, Gang would be 30 minutes shorter, and the reduction in
running time would help.
As it stands, the gritty Gang delivers last-second heroics, surprising amounts
of humor, and the beating heart of an unexpected champion. Let's put it into
football terms. This motivational cheerer isn't a flashy wide receiver or a
star quarterback. It's the stocky, reliable running back who drops his
shoulder, breaks a few tackles, and picks up tough yards on the way to a moral
victory.
The DVD includes deleted scenes, commentary track, making-of featurettes, and a
multi-angle feature.
He will rock you.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





