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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $12.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $23.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $18.39 |
Closed Caption; 2 featurettes: Coach Carter - The Man Behind the Movie, Fast Break at Richmond High; 6 deleted scenes; "Hope" music video by Twista featuring Faith Evans; Widescreen version enhanced for 16:9 TVs; Dolby Digital: English 5.1 Surround, English 2.0 Surround, French 5.1 Surround; English subtitles; Spanish subtitles
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Not Team Players
2. Accepting the Job
3. Contract
4. Late for Practice
5. Student Athlete
6. The Offense Runs
7. Another Sister
8. Suicides and Push-Ups
9. Classroom Performance
10. An Apology
11. The Dance
12. Bayhill Tournament
13. The Party
14. Report to the Library
15. Real Statistics
16. Education
17. Street Violence
18. Lockout Vote
19. Progress
20. Kenyon and Kyra, Nothing Is as Good
21. The Playoffs
22. Fourth Quarter
23. Rich What?!
Samuel L. Jackson is one of the hardest-working actors in movies, and it seems that nary a month goes by that he doesn't turn up in either a starring or supporting role. Like most professionals, he occasionally takes a job just for the paycheck, and he's been in his share of schlocky films. The inspirational-by-Hollywood-design drama Coach Carter might easily have fallen into that category, but it escapes the designation thanks to Jackson's earnest, passionate portrayal of a real-life California basketball coach who put his players' grade-point averages above their game stats. Ken Carter, himself a former sports star, has already distinguished himself in the military and as a successful small-business owner when he volunteers to become a high-school basketball coach. His players are loud, arrogant, and disrespectful; they disdain education and believe their futures lie in NBA stardom. Carter commands their attention and forces them to sign a "contract" promising to maintain a decent GPA or be benched. The body of the movie deals with his efforts to make these unruly charges into disciplined players and, more important, good students. Director Thomas Carter (Save the Last Dance) is saddled with a script that, while based on facts, teems with clichéd characters and situations: the rocky beginning of the season, the troubled star player (played by Rob Brown), the crisis of confidence, and, of course, the climactic Big Game. Thus hampered, he relies mightily upon his cast to give the film credibility -- and he's not let down. Jackson makes Carter an indomitable, fiercely intense figure, and the passion he brings to familiar scenes makes them seem less hackneyed. Also impressive in her role as the star player's pregnant girlfriend -- who sees the coach's insistence on college over possible NBA tryouts as a threat to her future -- is pop singer Ashanti. The case is persuasively made that young black men have other options than rap music and sports stardom, and this important truth buttresses what would otherwise be a very formulaic movie. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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