We Are Marshall Movie Review
We Are Marshall Review

"We Are Marshall" Overview

Rating: PG
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : McGProducer : Brent O'Connor,Thomas Tull,Jeanne Allgood
Screenwiter : Jamie Linden,Cory Helms
Starring : Matthew McConaughey,Matthew Fox,David Strathairn,Ian McShane,Anthony Mackie
Football fans (myself included) talk a lot about pain. The physical sport
relies heavily on violent verbiage: We got killed out there today, we're going
to slaughter that team, and so on. Those terms have never seemed more
inappropriate than they do right now.
In 1970, the West Virginia-based Marshall University learned the true meaning
of pain in the face of a loss. The team lost family and friends tied to the
small school's football program when a plane crashed on its way home from East
Carolina University. Administration, coaches, and surviving players left behind
due to injury faced difficult decisions in the aftermath of the tragedy --
should they scrap the program or field a team of substitutes and play in honor
of the deceased?
Off the field, the inspired-by-true-events melodrama properly respects the
painful material -- the film's director, McG, helmed two Charlie's Angels
movies but shows miraculous growth in this film. And by that, I mean he largely
abandons the buzz-cut edits and pop-rock music cues of those cavity inducing
sugar rushes, and allows well-conceived characters to have genuine
conversations about meaningful things. Hey, progress is progress.
We Are Marshall runs its sincere story, credited to Jamie Linden and Cory
Helms, through the playbook of motivational sports movies, jabbing a few
emotional buttons and blitzing a few heartstrings. Matthew Fox of TV's Lost
conveys the sadness of Marshall's survivors with heavy hung shoulders and
mournful stares. David Strathairn, always welcome, personifies a conflicted
school president torn between the memory of the deceased and the promise of a
bright future at the end of the mourning process.
That ray of hope is Jack Lengyel (Matthew McConaughey), a football instructor
and family man so moved by Marshall's predicament that he hounds the school's
leaders for a head coaching job. Lengyel's a space cadet, an unfocused sports
cliché wrapped in a plaid blazer who is prone to random tangents but dedicated
to his team. Despite his unorthodox methods, Lengyel will have his team ready
for game day.
And that's where Marshall fumbles. On the field, McG's picture mirrors every
other football flick we've recently seen. It might as well be the kids of
Gridiron Gang, the convicts of The Longest Yard or Vince Papale's Philadelphia
Eagles from Invincible tossing the pigskin around. There's only so many ways
one can stage the action between the lines, and I'm afraid we've exhausted them
by the time we reach Marshall.
Football players know that games are won in the trenches, that small zone
between the offensive and defensive lines that can swing a close game toward a
win or a loss. The same goes for football movies, and Marshall -- a great film
for the school's alumni but a decent film for everyone else -- mainly prevails
when it wanders into that moral gray area between the need to honor its fallen
players and the desire to simply play.
She are Marshall.
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Review by Sean O'Connell
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