While following the same basic formula as all movies of its genre, Boaz
Yakin's "Remember the Titans" is a surprisingly well-made football dramedy
that, thanks to the assured, non-stereotypical screenplay by Gregory Allen
Howard, manages to genuinely entertain and excite, even when it is offering
up a cliched moment or two. Simply put, it is the best sports film since
1993's "Rudy."
Based on a true story set during the first year of integration between the
black and white students at T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria,
Virginia, circa 1971, "Remember the Titans" tells of the famed Titans
football team, which was headed up that very same year by the team's first
black coach, earnest family man Herman Boone (Denzel Washington). At first,
previous head coach Bill Yoast (Will Patton) is upset to be downgraded to
merely Boone's assistant, but just as Boone teaches his team how to get along
and overcome their racial and prejudicial differences, Yoast begins to
sympathize and deeply relate to Boone himself.
One of the pleasures in watching "Remember the Titans" is realizing how the
movie is not so much about the Titans football team winning the state
championship, as it is about the team players learning to respect each other
and using the sport as a way of expressing their future goals and dreams in
life. Too often sports films rely solely on the suspense of whether the
hero's team will win "the big game," sacrificing character development for
such a worn-out plotline, and thus, they fail because 9.9 times out of 10 it
is a given which team will come out on top. "Remember the Titans" does things
a bit different by exposing itself as not only a so-called "football movie,"
but also an intelligent, if somewhat commercialized, view of race relations
in 1971's Northern Virginia.
The cast is top-flight, particularly the younger actors, who create distinct
characters out of potentially one-dimensional supporting roles. Ryan Hurst
(1998's "Saving Private Ryan") is an absolute standout as head white captain
Gerry Bertier, while his nemesis-turned-close-friend Julius Campbell is,
likewise, well-played by Wood Harris (2000's "Committed"). Of the other
football player, other notables include newcomer Ryan Gosling's truly likable
turn as Allan Bosley; Kip Pardue (2000's "Whatever It Takes") as the
charming, peacemaking hippie Sunshine; and Ethan Suplee, effective as the
overweight Lastik, who has no known future after graduation. As Gerry's
caring, but prejudiced girlfriend, Kate Bosworth (1998's "The Horse
Whisperer") makes a minor impression with her few touching scenes in the
second half, and Hayden Panettiere (1999's "Message in a Bottle"), as
Assistant Coach Yoast's determined and precocious 9-year-old daughter,
Cheryl, who narrates the picture as an adult, is appropriately precocious,
delicately balancing her childish innocence with a wise-beyond-her-years
dedication to her father's profession.
As the two central figures, Denzel Washington (1999's "The Hurricane") can do
no wrong, and his portrayal of the rough-edged Boone, who often hides his
warmer, more caring side, is right on the mark. Meanwhile, Will Patton
(2000's "Gone in Sixty Seconds"), too often underutilized in films, brings a
heartfelt realism to his fully written role of Yoast.
Overlooking a decidedly unnecessary wraparound sequence set in 1981, ten
years after the central action, "Remember the Titans" is a motion picture
that, for the first time in several years, producer Jerry Bruckheimer (1998's
"Armageddon," 2000's "Coyote Ugly") can be proud of. With very little
objectionable material, it is the rarest of PG-rated films that hold the
ability of entertaining both adults and children, who may even learn a thing
or two in the process about the importance of character and morals within
each given individual. "Remember the Titans" is a veritable winner.
Copyright © 2000 Dustin Putman