Film Review Of The Movie 'Remember The Titans'

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Walt Disney Pictures film, “Remember the Titans” came from a screenplay written by Gregory Allen Howard, and was produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and directed by Boaz Yakin. The film is based on a true story about an African American football coach named Herman Boone, who is played by Denzel Washington, who tries to begin a racially divided team at T.C. Williams High School in the Washington, D.C. suburb of Alexandria, Virginia during the 1970s. Actor Will Patton plays Bill Yoast who led his team to fifteen winning seasons is demoted to the assistance coach under Boone, who is very tough, opinionated, and very different from the beloved Yoast. Ryan Hurst and Wood Harris play two of the main football players Gerry Bertier and Julius Campbell. “Remember the Titans” was released September 2000 during a year of films lacking emotion, overdone with special effects, and poor scripts Remember the Titans shockingly brings intelligence and emotion to a movie. There is no surprise that the popularity of the movie being so high because Americans love sports, and since there is emotion added along with the sports factor Americans just eat it up. Remember the Titans may be rated PG but throughout the film it deals with R rated issues in a way that captures the audience. The Titans are not only dealing with their team being joined by another team, this other team is an all black team. Coach Boone not only has to try to get this team to intertwine with one another, he has to deal with the racism that comes from everyone else in town. Coach Yoast has to cope with someone coming in and taking not only his head-coaching job from him but also his team, he becomes the assistant for a team that he used to have complete control over. Once the team become...

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...t to depict a toilet stool coming through your window was a bit much…” Racial tensions mounted between citizens more than the players, the newly integrated football players were more concerned with securing a starting position on the team (Tate 1). Howard created more racial tension in the movie than the citizens of Alexandria actually went through. When the three schools joined together to create T.C. Williams in reality the classes tripled in size, which resulted in a larger pool of talent. Its success was more attributed to consolidation than integration (IMDb).
The audience slowly sees the players coming together forgetting about the color of each other’s skin. The players begin to find out that they have things in common with one another through things like music. The famous locker room scene where the players come together for “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough”.

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