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Hoosiers

Plot

Hoosiers tells the true story of a group of underdogs who become champions. Set in the 1950s, Hoosiers is about a hard-luck, unemployed college basketball coach (Gene Hackman) who gets a chance to coach a small-town Indiana high-school basketball team. Facing resentment from the community and the team itself, Hackman manages to inspire his young athletes, leading them to the state championship with the help of the assistant coach (Dennis Hopper), who happens to be a recovering alcoholic. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

Review

No matter the quality of the film or its box office success, Gene Hackman has been one of the most consistently interesting actors since 1969's Bonnie and Clyde. In the decidedly straightforward Hoosiers, he could have played his role as written and gotten away with a cliched characterization. As usual, though, he brings a genuine human complexity to his single-minded basketball coach with something to hide. It's somewhat similar to one of Hackman's greatest roles, Harry Caul in The Conversation: both men are fish out of water unless surrounded by what they know, whether sound equipment or basketballs. Hackman keeps the film's other elements in the realm of believability. The "unknown" segment of the cast -- the townspeople and the team -- are also remarkably natural, and they bring an important authenticity to the setting. The David-and-Goliath formula is overused in American films, and Hoosiers walks a fine line of calculated sentimentality -- a line that director David Anspaugh and writer Angelo Pizzo would cross in their next effort, the football film Rudy. Dennis Hopper received an Oscar nomination for his supporting role, which many wags quipped was as much in recognition of his corrosive work that same year in Blue Velvet as it was for Hoosiers. ~ Brendon Hanley, Rovi

Cast

Brad Boyle - Whit; Steve Hollar - Rade; Brad Long - Buddy; David Neidorf - Evertt; Kent Poole - Merle; Wade Schenck - Ollie; Scott Summers - Strap; Marius Valainis - Jimmy; Gloria Dorson - Millie; Rich Komenich - Reporter; Chelcie Ross - George; Robert Sutton - Reporter; Robert Swan - Rollin; Robert F. Boyle - Referee - Oolitic; Mike Dalzell - Carl; Wil Dewitt - Reverend Doty; Eric Gilliom - J. June; Michael O'Guinne - Rooster; Larua Robling - Loetta; Michael Sassone - Preacher Purl; Sam Smiley - Referee - Cedar Knob; Ken Strunk - Referee - Dugger; John Robert Thompson - Sheriff Finley; John E. Blazier - Spectator

Credit

Graham Henderson - Associate Producer, Jane Anderson - Costume Designer, David Anspaugh - Director, C. Timothy O'Meara - Editor, John Daly - Executive Producer, Derek Gibson - Executive Producer, Jerry Goldsmith - Composer (Music Score), David Lubin - Production Designer, David Nichols - Production Designer, Fred Murphy - Cinematographer, John Daly - Producer, Derek Gibson - Producer, Graham Henderson - Producer, Angelo Pizzo - Producer, Carter DeHaven III - Producer, Janis Lubin - Set Designer, Brendon Smith - Set Designer, Ernie F. Orsatti - Stunts, Angelo Pizzo - Screenwriter, Alvin Sargent - Screenwriter

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