 | |
List Price: $19.99 | | Label: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
Salesrank: 7919
Released: March 14, 2006 |
| Our Price: $10.82 |
| Used Price: $4.85 |
|
MPAA Rating: Unrated Media: DVD |
|
Editorial Review:
This must-see Director's Cut, featuring a rousing performance by Academy Award(R) winner Denzel Washington (2001 Best Actor, TRAINING DAY), gives you even more to cheer about. Experience a celebration of how a town torn apart by resentment, friction, and mistrust comes together in triumphant harmony. The year is 1971. After leading his team to 15 winning seasons, football coach Bill Yoast (Will Patton) is demoted and replaced by Herman Boone (Washington), tough, opinionated, and very different from the beloved Yoast. How these two men overcome their differences and turn a group of hostile young men into champions, plays out in a remarkable and winning story -- now with all-new bonus features and scenes not shown in theaters!
Description of Remember the Titans (Director's Cut):
With only one major star (Denzel Washington), an appealing cast of fresh unknowns, and a winning emphasis of substance over self-indulgent style, Boaz Yakin's Remember the Titans is, like Rudy before it, a football movie that will be fondly remembered by anyone who sees it.
Set in Alexandria, Virginia, in 1971, the fact-based story begins with the integration of black and white students at T. C. Williams High School. This effort to improve race relations is most keenly felt on the school's football team, the Titans, and bigoted tempers flare when a black head coach (Washington) is appointed and his victorious predecessor (Will Patton) reluctantly stays on as his assistant. It's affirmative action at its most potentially volatile, complicated by the mandate that the coach will be fired if he loses a single game in the Titans' 13-game season. The players represent a hotbed of racial tension, but as the team struggles toward unity and gridiron glory, Remember the Titans builds on several subplots and character dynamics to become an inspirational drama of Rocky-like proportions.
Yakin--whose debut, Fresh, was one of the best independent films of the 1990s--understands the value of connecting small scenes to form a rich climactic payoff. Likewise, Washington provides a solid dramatic foundation (his coach is obsessively harsh, but for all the right reasons) while giving his younger co-stars ample time in the spotlight. The result is a film that achieves what it celebrates: an enriching sense of unity that's unquestionably genuine. (Ages 9 and older) --Jeff Shannon
Remember the Titans (Director's Cut) Reviews:
Remember The Titans 
2009-11-24 - I have this movie I got this for someone else who wanted this it came very quick I am just really glad that now this person can't bug me thanks it came on time
love this movie! 
2009-11-24 - i love this movie! there are a lot of lessons and many other things people can take away from this movie
Pleased 
2009-11-17 - It came very quickly and in good condition. My daughter loved this movie but we only had it in VHS.
Great Movie! 
2009-11-09 - I have seen this movie a few times before I purchases it. Great movie for the price.
DVD 
2009-10-09 - Usually I do not like to comment or feedback on the items that I bought from Amazon. This time, I wish to highlight and warn others who would like to purchase from this fellow because the used DVD that I bought from him is of a very low quality, there are so many scratches on it, it SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN SOLD!