Coach
Carter Movie Review:
Towering
above everything and everyone else, Samuel L. Jackson owns
the screen in “Coach Carter.” His intense, dynamic
presence lifts this film above the usual sports movie and
makes it one to remember. Jackson immerses himself completely
in the role of Ken Carter, a real coach who taught his high
school basketball team there are more important things in
life than winning a game.
“I
had a very short list of actors who I’d like to see
portray me,” says Carter. “Samuel L. Jackson
was the only name on it.” After seeing this film,
I know why.
Facing
hostile parents, uncooperative teachers and the wrath of
the community, Carter refused to let his winning 1999 Richmond
High Oilers (a team including his own son) play any more
games until they lived up to the contract they signed --
an agreement to maintain a 2.30 grade point average, attend
class regularly and sit in the front row. Carter even padlocked
the gym to make sure no basketball activities could take
place. And he told his players to meet him in – shock
– the library. “Where is the library?”
asks one surprised student.
“My
idea was to substitute books for balls – as simple
as that,” Carter explains. Defending his reasoning
behind the controversial contract, Carter says the document
was used to prevent players from falling through the cracks
and to make them responsible for their future
“This
is definitely not your typical story and Ken Carter is not
your typical guy,” Jackson declares. “Both the
story and Ken are about teaching young people to expect
more from themselves and to see beyond their present.”
As a
former teacher and school administrator, I applaud the important
message of this movie, but I’m skeptical about its
depiction of teachers as reluctant to give progress reports
on the team members in their classes because “It’s
too much extra work.” In my experience, most teachers
would be happy to help students improve their academic work,
especially school athletes.
My only
other quibble about the film involves its anti-climactic
last basketball match. The rest of the games are exciting
to watch, thanks to Mark Ellis of Reel Sports who served
as the movie’s basketball coordinator. “These
kids worked nonstop for months to ensure the believability
of the game sequences and I believe all their hard work
and practice really paid off,” Ellis declares.
Directed
by Thomas Carter, who’s no relation to Ken Carter,
“Coach Carter” depicts the players’ home
environment as realistically as the basketball sequences.
In 1999, the Richmond, California, area concerned was a
run-down, low income community – and the movie definitely
gave me a feeling of “being there.”
Kudos
also to the young actors portraying Coach Carter’s
diverse group of team members. Rob Brown (“Finding
Forrester”) stands out as a key player conflicted
about his girlfriend’s (Ashanti) pregnancy, and Rich
Gonzalez (“Biker Boyz”) is immensely watchable
as the “tough guy” seduced by peer pressure
and the drug culture.
Because
it takes on so many educational and social issues, “Coach
Carter” is an extremely ambitious film. And that’s
probably exactly what the real Ken Carter wanted.




Betty
Jo Tucker
Since
it's based on a true story, we can forgive the filmmakers
their heartwarming excesses. This is a thoroughly entertaining
film, but you do wish they'd tell the tale without funnelling
it through Hollywood's inspirational movie assembly line.
Ken
Carter (Jackson) didn't need the job when he was offered
the chance to coach the losing basketball team at Richmond
High School, on the rough innercity side of San Francisco
Bay (although filmed amid L.A.'s palm trees). Basketball
is all these students live for, but Carter knows there are
some things more important than sport. Even after winning
over most of the players--and creating a winning team--he
finds strong resistance in the school and community. So
he takes drastic action.
The
painfully obvious script wastes no time setting up each
expected conflict. The characters are engaging, but only
slightly more than stereotypes. Jackson barely breaks a
sweat to play Carter's tough-love coach; he's almost too
nice as the guy willing to break the system to help the
kids. As his players, Brown (Finding Forrester) is the standout
as a conflicted and intelligent young man with a pregnant
girlfriend (Ashanti) and difficult decisions to make. Ri'chard
is very good as Carter's determined son; Gonzalez handles
the fiery tough-guy Latino role well; and Tanner, Gbewonyo
and Tatum give nicely edgy performances as the smart-mouthed
charmer, challenged student and tough white homie, respectively.
But
the cliched script often leaves them floundering with its
tame locker room antics, threats of drug/gang violence and
constant touching moments. Director Carter (no relation)
films the games energetically, but features so many shots
of the scoreboard (and so many last-second slo-mo clips)
that they become a new cliche all their own. At least he
gets the first "captain, my captain!" scene out
of the way early on. And avoids rah-rah halftime pep talks.
It also
helps that the film's based on real events, which gives
it the authenticity its superficial script lacks. There
are extremely important issues lurking in here that seriously
need examining, and while the film sidesteps the story's
true grit, it at pushes all the emotional buttons right
on cue.




Rich
Cline
Site
Contents Copyright© The Z Review, unless used with permission.This
site has no intention to infringe on the rights of the film
owners of Coach Carter and intellectual copyright holders of the
movies mentioned herein & hold copyright over the movie,
characters, merchandise & storyline.