Showing posts with label Kevin Costner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kevin Costner. Show all posts

Monday, March 2, 2015

Thoughts about 'McFarland, USA'

Saturday afternoon we went to see the movie 'McFarland, USA' from Walt Disney Pictures.  It is directed by Niki Caro from a screenplay by Christopher Cleveland, Bettina Gilois and Grant Thompson based on the true story of the cross country coach, Jim White.  White is played by Kevin Costner.  Maria Bello plays Jim's wife, Cynthia, and Morgan Saylor plays their 14-year-old daughter, Julie.
Poster for Walt Disney movie 'McFarland, USA'

When the movie opens, White is a high school football coach in Boise, ID.  His team is losing, he loses his temper in the locker room at half-time, accidentally assaults the team's captain, and gets fired.  In the next scene, he's driving his family pulling a U-Haul trailer to the only job he can get -- assistant football coach and life sciences teacher at the high school in McFarland, CA. 

McFarland is a small town in the heart of the Central Valley and the high school is right next to a state prison.  Most of the students at the school are from Hispanic-American families who work in the fields surrounding the town.  The family's first evening in McFarland they go to the only restaurant in town -- a taco joint.

White gets off on the wrong foot with the head football coach and is forced to give up the assistant coaching position.  But, he's noticed that the Hispanic players are sturdy and fast -- it turns out because they work beside their parents in the fields before and after school and because their diets are high in carbohydrates -- they're naturally carbo-loading.  White forces the principal to start a cross country running team by citing obscure state education rules and persuades one of the students from the football team to help recruit a 7-member cross country team.

The bulk of the movie is about how White coaches the team from initial defeat to ultimate victory -- with side visits to the Hispanic families of the runners; to a budding romance; to the Whites gradual acceptance by their Hispanic neighbors in McFarland; and to the struggles within the White family to adapt to both their economic and cultural circumstances.

"McFarland, USA' is a very satisfying movie -- not likely to win any prizes, but with all of the pleasures of 'underdog succeeds' movies.  Both Kevin Costner and Maria Bello offer fine performances that convey the challenges of finding themselves in a difficult, strange environment.  The rest of the mostly Hispanic cast are excellent at portraying their own challenges in confronting the strange world of long-distance running -- I would single out Carlos Pratt as Thomas, Hector Duran as Johnny, and Ramiro Rodriguez as Danny among the runners and Diana-Maria Riva as Senora Diaz the Hispanic earth mother and Martha Higareda as Lupe the loopy beautician (I couldn't resist) -- but the entire cast works well together portraying a Disneyfied version of a small, struggling Hispanic agricultural community.

The movie tip-toes around the edges of ethnic diversity and racial inequality and completely avoids hot button immigration issues.  Instead it relies on the steadfast work ethic, Spanglish vocabulary -- White is variously called 'Blanco' and 'El Jefe' before he is called 'Coach' --  and quaint customs of its Hispanic characters to make positive, often amusing points about the McFarland community's embrace of the White family.

Banner for the movie, 'McFarland, USA'

Monday, April 14, 2014

'Draft Day' with Kevin Costner and a lot of divas

Last Saturday afternoon we went to see 'Draft Day', the new movie starring Kevin Costner as Sonny Weaver, the manager of the Cleveland Browns.  The movie covers the time from when he leaves his home in the morning until he finishes celebrating his picks in the NBA draft.  During the day, he has to deal with one diva after another: the Browns egotistical owner (Frank Langella); the Browns arrogant new coach (Denis Leary); his recently-widowed, demanding mother (Ellen Burstyn); his needy girl-friend (Jennifer Garner) who is also lawyer in charge of the Browns salary cap (can that be a real job?); an entitled, Heisman-winning quarterback and prospective first round draft pick (Josh Pence); his smoothly over-confident agent (Sean Combs); numerous members of the Browns coaching and management staff; numerous managers of other NFL franchises; several other potential draft picks; several NFL officials and network sports casters playing themselves.  
Original 'Draft Day' Poster with Kevin Costner and various NFL paraphernalia

Much of the movie is told through phone conversations, which use ingenious split-screen effects to relieve the tedium.  There is also a lot footage devoted to NFL product placement footage -- Radio City Music Hall on 'draft day', various NFL venues and stadiums.

Costner is the deft, agile, mostly calm center of this on-going maelstrom of egos, opinions, demands, tantrums and diatribes.  It is a wonderful role, wonderfully played.  He makes you aware of his guile, subterfuge, humor, and befuddlement .

The rest of the cast plays various types of wood -- hard, soft, light, dark, exotic, common -- but all wooden.  It's like watching Kevin Costner walking through a forest desperately trying to make sense of these encounters, but there's no one else there.