Quantum Hoops Movie Review
Quantum Hoops Review
"Quantum Hoops" Overview

Rating: NR
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Rick GreenwaldProducer : Rick Greenwald
Screenwiter : Rick Greenwald
Starring : David Duchovny,Brett Bush,Jordan Carlson,Scott Davies,Roy Dow
Everyone loves an underdog, but this is ridiculous!
Cal Tech is one of the elite academic schools in the country, if not the world, and
as is usually the case in such institutes of higher learning, athletics take a distant
back seat. In fact, the school has tried to kill off its various NCAA programs severa
l times.
Few teams have faced more hardship than the Cal Tech basketball team, which didn't
have a stadium to play in for decades, and which chooses its team members based largely
on who shows up for the first day of practice. As you can imagine, its record hasn't be
en great. In fact, it hadn't won a game in its conference in 21 years by the time this
documentary was shot.
Despite being a Sportscenter punchline, Cal Tech perseveres through it all, diligently
losing every game it plays but continuing to show up. The students, many of whom
are interviewed here, don't really seem to mind. They enjoy the sport on its own
merits, not for the thrill of winning rings and glory. Why the coaches stay, well, that's
another issue (and one that is explored at length by the documentary).
But then something odd happens: Cal Tech still loses, but not by 60 or 80 points.
Margins close up to 20, 15, 10... and Cal Tech looks like it might actually break
its 200-plus gaming losing streak. It almost happens. It's one of the film's most
compelling sequences when the Beavers actually make it into overtime with a tie game.
Narrated by David Duchovny and capably directed by first-timer Rick Greenwald, the
film is almost the same underdog that Cal Tech is: You have to ask, based on its
description alone (Geeks play basketball and lose every game), exactly who will want
to see this movie? Quantum Hoops vanished at the box office quickly, but it deserves a wider
audience, and I hope it gets it on DVD.
As a final note, it is so heartwarming to see all these earnest youths with their
science experiments and lab projects. You think they might be destined to save the
world through technology... until the epilogue, when you realize they all decide
to become investment bankers. Meh.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





