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We Are Marshall (Widescreen Edition)
 
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We Are Marshall (Widescreen Edition)

Matthew McConaughey , Matthew Fox , McG    PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)   DVD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 6.11 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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2 Reviews
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4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The story of the Young Thundering Herd from tragedy to triumph, Sep 22 2007
By 
Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (HALL OF FAME)   
This review is from: We Are Marshall (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
"We are Marshall" is the true story of what happened when a chartered plane crashed just short of the airport in Huntington, West Virginia on November 14, 1970, wiping out the varsity football team for Marshall University. Having to replace virtually the entire team and coaching staff, university President Donald Dedmon (David Strathairn) hires Jack Lengyel (Matthew McConaughey), who is not a Marshall alum, but who thinks that he can help a team, school, and community devastated by the tragedy. The story ends a year later, when the Thundering Herd play their first home game of the season. While watching this true story play out it might occur to you that this inspirational story reaches its climax when Marshall played in its first game under Lengyel the week before, because just fielding a team again is a major achievement, but "We Are Marshall" stays faithful to the genre it represents and represents well.

In many ways the most emotional part of the movie is the opening half-hour, that starts with the end of the final football game at East Carolina and plays out the rest of that fateful Saturday. In depicting the plane crash, the film's director McG gives us bits and pieces of the moment of realization for those who will be touched by this disaster as the news breaks. Wide shots of the forest on fire contrast with the downpour in which a wife learns that her husband was not on the plane. Inspirational movies of this sort are intended to provoke strong emotions if not tears, but rarely is the first act as emotionally powerful as it is in this 2006 film. The plane crash was not some place far, far away, but on the outskirts of town. The students and townsfolk not only got to see the rescue vehicles streaming to the crash sight, they also got to go and see the fiery wreckage in the woods for themselves (at least they do in this film).

The other main characters in this film are those touched hardest by the tragedy. Matthew Fox plays Red Dawson, the assistant coach who gave up his seat on the plane at the last moment, Ian McShane is Paul Griffen, the father of the team's star running back, and Kate Mara is Annie Cantrell, who was engage to Griffen's son. One of the things I respected about this film is that not everyone is able to walk back into Marshall's football stadium for the big game, let alone be healed by the final credits. Far and away the most compelling character in the entire film is Anthony Mackie's Nate Ruffin, the star defensive back who stayed in Huntington because of an injured shoulder. It is Ruffin who organizes the students to keep the football program and who wants to keep playing despite re-injuring his shoulder time and time again. His motivation seems unique, because Ruffin wants his team back, and it is Ruffin who is the heart of the Young Thundering Herd.

There are moments where the comic relief elements of the film run against the grain a bit too much for my taste; McConaughey's Jack Lengyel comes across as a bit of a bozo early on and there is a sense in which we do not get to the "real" him until his big speech before the Young Thundering Herd's first home game the season after the tragedy. But then a running gag involving West Virginia University, which keeps getting all of the recruits that Lengyel and his coaches have on their board, takes a nice twist, and I have to admit that there needs to be some levity in telling story. Furthermore, as much as I hate slow motion for big plays in sports movies, I really like the way McG intercuts flashes from all that has happened in this film into that moment, and the wonderful way that history and drama are intermixed during the final credits. For my money, "We are Marshall" is one of the better inspirational sports movies in some time.
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4.0 out of 5 stars strong acting,but just a bit too long and a little slow at times (4.2/5), Feb 20 2008
By 
falcon "disdressed12" (canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: We Are Marshall (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
this is a pretty terrific movie.the acting is great there's tons of
action,and there are even a few touches of lite humour.the movie is
also very touching,and heartrending,especially near the beginning.it's
hard to watch without becoming emotional since the movie is so
intense.it's a true story about hope and faith and battling against the
odds.but it doesn't hit you over the head with sentimentality,at least
i didn't think so.there were probably some dramatic liberties taken to
make the story more appealing for the contemporary audience,but i'm
sure the gist of the story is accurate and intact.the only minor
negative things i can say about this movie is that i felt it was too
long and a bit slow at times.it can also be quite depressing,though
that's too be expected due to the subject matter.still you prepare
yourself for that.otherwise this is a movie well worth watching.i give
We Are Marshall a strong 4.2/5
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars (136 customer reviews)

36 of 36 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Yes, We are Marshall!!, Jun 2 2007
By L. Forshee "WV Rock Chick" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: We Are Marshall (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
I have lived in Huntington, WV almost my entire life and attended Marshall University. I was a small child when the plane crashed in 1970. I remember, first hand, what our town and community went through after the tragic loss of so many lives. When I first heard that the movie was going to be made, I was both thrilled and trepidatious. Could a big time Hollywood movie capture the real event with integrity, honesty and respect? The answer is a resounding Yes!

McG, McConaughey, Fox and the rest of the cast and crew treated our story with all of that and more. The movie is historically accurate, (thanks to a great script by Jamie Linden) the acting is excellent, the soundtrack is fabulous, and McG - thank you for filming a good portion of this movie in Huntington!

This movie was not only "necessary" but a story that applies to so many other "rise from the ashes" events in our world today. I know it would seem easy for me to love this movie because I lived it, but my adoration for this film actually comes from the efforts and dedication that the film makers put into this project. They took a true story and made it into a movie that can touch the heart of anyone who sees it.

For those critics who spend too much time focusing on the "pacing," and "spirituality" or other minutia, you're missing the point. This isn't a film for pretentious, overly analytical critics or Sunday School debate. Enjoy this film for what it is. It was intended to share an uplifting and heart-warming true story and to evoke understanding, empathy, courage and determination. If you have any humanity in you, you will like this movie! GO HERD! WE ARE MARSHALL!!

70 of 76 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars True Story of America's Greatest Sports Tragedy, Jan 1 2007
By Antoinette Klein - Published on Amazon.com
On November 14, 1970, an airplane carrying the Marshall University football team, coaches, and many prominent supporters crashed with all aboard killed. This movie portrays what happened to those left behind and how they rose from the ashes of this disaster and resurrected the football team.

Since everyone knows what is in store, the first part of the movie is especially poignant as you meet the players and know their lives are destined to end far too early. What a typical moviegoer might not be familiar with is the character of Jack Lengyel, a man who was the only one willing to come forward and try to salvage the football program. Matthew McMcConaughey gives a stirring performance as Coach Lengyel as does Matthew Fox as Red Dawson, the assistant coach who gives up his seat at the last minute to another person. The guilt of being a survivor eats at him and nearly destroys his life.

Emotional, uplifting, and enjoyable....this movie manages to honor those who died and those who picked up the pieces and restored pride to Marshall.

26 of 27 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Stunning, simplistic, rewarding!, Sep 16 2007
By L. Quido "quidrock" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: We Are Marshall (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
I remember clearly, as a high school junior, the shock and loss that the crash of the aircraft carrying the Marshall University football team invested on a nation. The town, the college, and those left behind must have suffered so. It has taken 25 years to portray that loss on film, and the December film, "We Are Marshall", while not living up to its promise as one of the years "awardable" movies, was nevertheless a moving film experience.

The film deals briefly with the events leading up to the crash, and then in depth with the different ways that those affiliated with the school grieve and start over again. Star athlete Nate Ruffin (Anthony Mackie) is stunned at the fact that he wasn't on the plane, due to injury, and that his legacy is to pick up where the team left off and start over again. His faith in that new start never waivers. Unlike Ruffin, the school's administration and its president Donald Dedmon (the always excellent David Strathairn)
are more realistic. They can't recruit, can't play freshman, can't rebuild right away. The school is small and although "The Thundering Herd" were important to students, alumni and faculty alike, the task is insurmountable. They will suspend the program for a few years to give everyone a chance to recover.

The student body has a different plan, and their outrage presents Dedmon with the need to try. He can't find a coach and has to settle for a virtual unknown from the College of Wooster. Jack Lengyel (Matthew McConaughey, complete with greasy hair in an unlikely length and clothes of plaid polyester) accepts the challenge He's just savvy and stubborn enough to make it work, to reformat and refashion a team of sorts, and even to talk former recruiting scout, Red Dawson (Matthew Fox) into returning as an assistant coach.

The remainder of the film deals with both the practical matter of building the team, the difficulty in winning, and the way those in the town and at the school deal with the grief of what might have been.
Director McG, not a favorite of mine (he brought us BOTH Charlie's Angel's films) surprises with his light touch with the story and his ability to let the film find its own legs. It is a poignant tale. It bogs down between the decision to move forward with the team and the actual first game. The game sequences have an authentic feel, and the score moves well with the film. The film feels like authentic West Virginia and authentic 70's. It never attempts to be something it isn't; it's a sports film that treats the sport within the greater landscape of what was happening in the times and how emotions sometimes get in the way of moving on with your life. It deeply affected the crowd in the theater on the day I saw it.

McConaughey is goofy, offbeat and believable as Lengyel. Aside from his performance, everyone else in the film works well together as an ensemble, with few false notes but not much to remember about their contributions. There's no cliche here, just a simple story that will make you both sad and hopeful. Forget what the critics say, "We Are Marshall" will touch you.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 136 reviews  4.5 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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