a side of basketball that often goes unrevealed
Through The Fire (2005)
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Reviews Counted:31
Fresh:22
Rotten:9
Average Rating:6.3/10
Consensus: Through the Fire may raise more questions than it answers, but it's no less engrossing for its flaws.
Theatrical Release:Feb 10, 2006 Limited
Synopsis: Since the age of 9, Sebastian Telfair has been one of the best-known basketball players on the streets of New York. At the start of his senior year at Lincoln High School, while his friend LeBron... Since the age of 9, Sebastian Telfair has been one of the best-known basketball players on the streets of New York. At the start of his senior year at Lincoln High School, while his friend LeBron James is making history with a $90 million sneaker deal and NBA contract straight out of high school, Sebastian calls a press conference to announce his decision to attend college at the end of the year. But 18 years of poverty in the public housing projects of Coney Island have created a hunger in Sebastian. When two young men are gunned down in the hallway right outside his apartment, Sebastian begins to feel that he wants to get his family out as soon as possible and that – if he can – he might try to make the jump right from high school to the pros. Five years earlier, Sebastian’s older brother, Jamel Thomas, was a basketball star at Providence College, expecting to be drafted into the NBA and get the family out of the projects himself. But no NBA team picked him and he and the family were devastated. Their mother, Erica, was heartbroken and Jamel was forced to go overseas to play in obscurity. Now it is up to Sebastian to set things right for their mother, for Jamel and for his eight other brothers and sisters. Under pressure that builds with every game, Sebastian continues to show his genius on the court. Everyone – from the media who build up his legend to the sneaker companies who compete for his loyalty to the NBA scouts who dog his every step – claims a piece of Sebastian for themselves. Dwayne “Tiny” Morton, a former champion player at Lincoln who failed to make the NBA himself, turns up the heat on Sebastian even higher. Against the backdrop of despair that seemingly awaits all the young African-American men in Coney Island who don’t make the NBA, Tiny drives Sebastian and his team mercilessly, treading a fine line between tough love and abuse. In the end, Sebastian is an 18-year-old boy forced to carry the hopes of his family, his coach and all of Coney Island on his shoulders. When he finally decides to pursue the NBA instead of college, the media that helped create his legend turn on him almost instantly, saying he is not ready to be a pro. Under Jamel’s guidance, Sebastian drives himself harder and harder, while the family braces for another heartbreak. Their entire future rests on Sebastian’s selection in the draft, and the emotion in the room as they watch their fate unfold is gut-wrenching. As America wrestles with the phenomenon of poor children passing up the traditional means of upward mobility for the win-it-all/lose-it-all gamble of professional sports, Sebastian Telfair has become the focal point of the debate. Through Sebastian’s story, this film provides a candid, provocative and intimate look into the culture that can push these children to greatness…or drive them to ruin. -- Official Site [More]
Starring: Sebastian Telfair
Starring: Sebastian Telfair
Director: Jonathan Hock
Director: Jonathan Hock
Studio: Cinema Libre
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Reviews for Through The Fire
[Through the Fire] seems willing to beg off the tough questions in exchange for access.
What Hock's film finds is much richer and more resonant than the average exit-from-the-ghetto tale.
Stylistically, it plays like an ESPN profile more than a serious documentary, but the issues and drama is all real enough -- and so is the big-league money.
You know a filmmaker has done his job when his movie appeals even to people who couldn't care less about the subject.
Has plenty of soul, plenty of competitive fire, and plenty of food for thought.
It’s a must-see proposition for fans of basketball and a fairly riveting bit of social and economic history for everyone else.
Though some will see this fast-paced film as proof that hoop dreams really can come true, the real strength of Through the Fire lies in its careful, often indirect questioning of the moral universe of professional sports and big-money endorsements.
The film's biggest accomplishment is that it is entertaining whether or not you know the outcome. Telfair's got the skills to play and market himself, and Through the Fire has enough game to make us care.
Not just a story of a person but a story of a neighborhood, a city and a plan to escape.
Sebastian has the nice-guy charisma of Derek Luke and he's easy to root for
[A] superb, ultimately exhilarating account of Coney Island basketball phenom Sebastian Telfair's senior year at Lincoln High.
Through the Fire fails to show indignation that rich white guys are trying to get even richer at the expense of a naive black kid from the ghetto.
Jonathan Hock's unwaveringly upbeat documentary follows the basketball sensation Sebastian Telfair as he chooses between the University of Louisville and the N.B.A.
Short on authorial insightfulness but long on subject-matter fascination.
Latest News for Through The Fire
August 31, 2006:
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