By [the end] we have come to have real respect for Russell's determination.
The Heart of the Game (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:95
Fresh:82
Rotten:13
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: This group of high school girls and their eccentric basketball coach easily win your heart with their unusual humanity and dynamism.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for brief strong language
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Sports/Recreation
Theatrical Release:Jun 9, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $360,467
Synopsis: "Sink your teeth in their necks! Draw blood!" is the rallying cry of the Roosevelt Roughriders girls' basketball team. Imagining themselves as a pack of wolves, the girls tear into opposing... "Sink your teeth in their necks! Draw blood!" is the rallying cry of the Roosevelt Roughriders girls' basketball team. Imagining themselves as a pack of wolves, the girls tear into opposing teams and stand together as warriors both on and off the court. When Seattle filmmaker Ward Serrill met Bill Resler, a college tax professor who moonlights as a girls' basketball coach, he didn't realize that he was about to embark on an incredible seven-year journey. Serrill, camera in hand, followed Resler - who looks more like Santa Claus in Birkenstocks than a whistle-blasting high school coach - into the Roosevelt High School gym and soon discovered a group of girls whose unbridled toughness, passion and energy he came to call THE HEART OF THE GAME. Then, one day, onto the Roughriders' court (and into the film) walked Darnellia Russell - a tough, inner-city girl whose off-court struggles would eventually threaten to crash the star athlete's plans to play college ball and be the first person in her family to get a college education. At the center of THE HEART OF THE GAME is Darnellia's unforgettable true story - the loss of her eligibility and her legal battle to get back on court to play the game that means everything to her. With Coach Resler, her team and her family standing by her side, she takes on enormous personal obstacles as well as the ruling body of high school sports in Washington State. --© Woody Creek Productions [More]
Director: Ward Serrell
Director: Ward Serrell
Producer: Larry Estes, Ward Serrell, Liz Mann
Studio: Miramax Films
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Reviews for The Heart of the Game
It's a wrenching, ennobling essay on teamwork and the hard struggle to change one's life.
...director Ward Serrill finds a myth-ready figure in Bill Resler, the college tax professor who takes over the Roosevelt High School varsity team and uses a combination of crazed passion for the sport and a laid-back personal approach toward the players
It emerges as a captivating and classic sports film. It is also a compelling story about fairness and doing the right thing, from the team level on up to state bureaucracies and the judicial system.
Combines nonstop action with an absorbing story to become a classic on par with Hoosiers and Hoop Dreams -- with the best of He Got Game and Glory Road thrown in for good measure.
It's a lively, inspirational achievement that will put a lump in your throat.
The dramas going on here, on and off the court, more than make up for any lack of flash.
Serrill's documentary on a girls' high school basketball team in Seattle has oodles of heart. What it hasn't got is game.
There's no denying the exuberant energy and emotional force of this movie. It gets to you.
Heart of the Game does contain a powerful human story, but we are forced to watch it from a distance. Serrill never penetrates its fringes.
If you or any kid over the age of 10 has even a half-interest in the definition of the word 'teamwork,' as well as the words 'real-life suspense,' this is the movie.
If you are a sports fan, a docu buff or just like a good, inspirational movie, then this is one for you.
This is one of the best docs of this sort I've seen since "Murderball,"
Suffice it to say that an entire team of Hollywood scriptwriters couldn't have come up with a better ending.
Genuinely inspiring and free of the drippy platitudes found in most sports-themed films, The Heart of the Game is an exhilarating triumph.
As far as magnetic team leaders go, it's hard to imagine a Hollywood screenwriter dreaming up a character as colorful as the coach in the basketball documentary, The Heart of the Game.
If you don't cheer for the high school girls basketball team in the bright documentary The Heart of the Game, you probably slash Mom's tires every Mother's Day.
Genuinely touching and unquestionably sincere, the movie certainly has heart -- but it could have used a little more game.
Yet another inspirational documentary that serves up the sort of dynamic characters and genuine intrigue that most of its fictional counterparts would kill for.
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