Tommy Lee Jones Movie:

Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 Blu-ray



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Tommy Lee Jones Movie:
Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 Blu-ray



Movie
Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 [Blu-ray]
Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 [Blu-ray]
List Price: $34.95Label: KINO VIDEO

Salesrank: 18483

Released: August 4, 2009
Our Price: $20.99
Used Price: $46.87
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: Blu-ray

Features:

  • Color
  • Letterboxed
  • Widescreen
  • Starring:

  • Tommy Lee Jones
  • Brian Dowling
  • Vic Gatto
  • Frank Champi
  • J.P. Goldsmith
  • Editorial Review:
    PREPOSTEROUSLY ENTERTAINING... PULSES WITH THE ARTFUL, EXCITING BEATS OF A THRILLER. - MANOHLA DARGIS, THE NEW YORK TIMES

    WONDERFUL... AN IRRESISTIBLE HUMAN STORY AND AS FINE A DOCUMENTARY ABOUT FOOTBALL AS HOOP DREAMS WAS ON BASKETBALL. - KENNETH TURAN, LOS ANGELES TIMES

    THE BEST FOOTBALL MOVIE I VE EVER SEEN. - J. HOBERMAN, THE VILLAGE VOICE

    An incredible true story that unfolds like a ripping good yarn... With an uproarious, impossible Hollywood ending (Andrew O Hehir, Salon.com), Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 is filmmaker Kevin Rafferty s (The Atomic Cafe) acclaimed documentary depicting one of the most legendary games in the history of sports. Harvard Stadium November 23, 1968. With Vietnam raging, Nixon in the White House, and issues from civil rights to women's lib dividing the country, Harvard and Yale, both teams undefeated for the first time since 1909, meet for the annual climax of the Ivy League football season. On the blue-blooded Yale campus, gridiron fever has made local celebrities out of a Yale team led by quarterback Brian Dowling, who hadn t lost a game that he finished since the 7th grade, and who was the role model for Doonesbury s B.D. At civil unrest scarred Harvard, a melting pot team of working class players, antiwar activists, and a decorated Vietnam vet set aside their differences for the Big Game. Together, Yale and Harvard stage an unforgettable football contest that baffled even their own coaches. Using vintage game footage and bracingly honest contemporary interviews with the players from both sides, including Harvard lineman and future OscarĀ® winner Tommy Lee Jones (No Country for Old Men), Rafferty crafts an alternately suspenseful, hilarious, and poignant portrait of American lives, American sports, and American ideals both tested on the playing field and transformed by turbulent times.

    Special Features:
    - Bonus Interviews (73 min.) Additional interview excerpts not included in the film, the players provide a deeper look at the season, the game, and its aftermath.
    - Theatrical Trailer

    Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 [Blu-ray] Reviews:
    Well Done-Great Nostalgia 4 Star Review
    2009-10-05 - I remember listening to this game with my late father-in-law. I had followed that Yale team all season and couldn't believe the startling collapse in the last few minutes. He was a Harvard fan, though softspoken about it. He obviously enjoyed my every wince as Harvard charged back from near certain defeat. The player interviews along with actual game films were nicely spliced together to produce a fine film.

    Harvard BEATS Yale 29-29!! 5 Star Review
    2009-09-12 - It's November 23, 1968 and, for the first time since 1909 Harvard and Yale are meeting in the last game of the season and both teams are undefeated. Yale is ranked 16th in the nation and is heavily favored. The title of the film gives away the ending but doesn't tell you or show you the improbable, almost impossible, ending to this game. If this was Michigan & Ohio State it would have been the game of the century. For the most part, except for Calvin Hill and Tommy Lee Jones, there are no household names in either lineup. But it's more than just a game, it's Harvard & Yale, the elite of the elite, and it's 1968 and the Vietnam War is at its height and the country has had two more assassinations with MLK & RFK. As exciting as the game was, the film is also a commentary on our country, particularly what was going on in the colleges & universities. The documentary is the game footage interspersed (sometimes in the middle of the play to create suspense) with commentary from the actual players involved in that play. As you might expect, the players are articulate and intelligent. You get a lot more than just comments on the game. Do you want to hear one opinion on why the sexual revolution was going on? Do you want to know what it was like to date Meryl Streep and what was she like as a college co-ed? How about who roomed with Al Gore and George W. Bush and the pranks they were involved in? What of a former decorated Marine just back from Vietnam and what it was like to confront war protestors in front of every classroom building and play on the same team with players who protested and participated in SDS. While I agree that mostly real football fans are going to want to watch this, it has broader appeal than some reviewers give it credit for. It's very well done and entertaining as well as quite a game. A little nostalgia for baby boomer football fans. Enjoy.










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