THE WRITING ON (AND OFF) THE WALL CAN'T WE JUST KEEP IT REEL?Byline: TOM HOFFARTH It was something No. 1 Lakers fan Jack Nicholson John Joseph Nicholson (born April 22 1937), known as Jack Nicholson, is a three time Academy Award winning American actor internationally renowned for his often dark-themed portrayals of neurotic characters. once screamed at Tom Cruise in a moment of movie-quote lore. But don't believe it. We can handle the truth. And truth be told, we're not sure we got the cliche "110 percent" of it with the lot of best sports films from 2006. On the night when Ellen DeGeneres Ellen Lee DeGeneres (born January 26, 1958) is an American stand-up comedian, actress, and currently the Emmy Award-winning host of the syndicated talk show The Ellen DeGeneres Show. DeGeneres has hosted both the Academy Awards and the Primetime Emmys. generously tosses around Oscar statues like Roger The Peanut Man slinging Goobers at Dodger Stadium • • [ , the thing that has really been making us nuts lately is how more scriptwriters for sports-themed movies have decided they've got something better in their heads, and they aren't held more accountable for the revisionist history Revisionist history carries both positive and negative connotations. Each has its own entry.
Consider these top sports flicks from a year ago, along with the fine print that was included somewhere on each movie poster: "Glory Road" ("Based on a true story.") "Gridiron Gang" ("Based on a true story.") "We Are Marshall We Are Marshall is a 2006 motion picture directed by McG dramatizing the aftermath of the 1970 plane crash that killed most of the Marshall University Thundering Herd football team, the rebuilding of the program, and the healing that the community undergoes. " ("A true story.") "Invincible" ("Inspired by the true story of Vince Papale Vincent Francis Papale (born February 9, 1946 in Glenolden, Pennsylvania) is a former professional American football player. He played three seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles of the NFL following two seasons with the Philadelphia Bell of the World Football League. .") "World's Fastest Indian" ("Based on One Hell of a True Story.") Based on all that, no wonder we should be conditioned once we commit ourselves to a darkened dark·en v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens v.tr. 1. a. To make dark or darker. b. To give a darker hue to. 2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy. 3. theater that anything close to this thing being considered a documentary is purely coincidental. The mind game becomes going scene to scene trying to figure out what really occurred. Really, if the movie was good enough to make in the first place because of a real series of events, why not keep it real? Or are we too naive to think that some things are too trite to be true? "It's a tough call, but I think I understand what the filmmakers are up against," said Randy Williams, the Santa Monica-based author of the recently released "Sports Cinema: 100 Movies, The Best of Hollywood's Athletic Heroes, Losers, Myths and Misfits" (448 pages, Limelight Editions, $24.95). The first issue, thankfully, seems to be making things look as authentic as possible. No more Tony Perkins as Jimmy Piersall, or we'll all go insane. After that, time is of the essence A phrase in a contract that means that performance by one party at or within the period specified in the contract is necessary to enable that party to require performance by the other party. Failure to act within the time required constitutes a breach of the contract. . "Film will always have a time problem because it can't explore a story like a novel," Williams said. "A sports movie could easily be a miniseries if they don't condense con·dense v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es v.tr. 1. To reduce the volume or compass of. 2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten. 3. Physics a. characters." Tell that to Sandy Bianchini. She's the ex-wife of Vince Papale. Not the one who threw him out of the house early in the movie "Invincible." That would be his first ex-wife. Bianchini was his spouse from '77 to '83 who already had a 9-year-old son and supported Papale through his Philadelphia Eagles tryout, short playing career and afterward. But she's the wife you don't see in the movie. Janet Cantrell, the barmaid played by Elizabeth Banks who ends up marrying him, is actually Papale's third (and current) wife. "How can a movie be made, a true story about Vince's climb, without his family being acknowledged?" Bianchini asked in a letter sent to various media outlets when the movie came out last August. "I have no control over the creative liberties taken in making the film," Papale replied when reporters asked about her complaint. This is the same Papale, a former World Football League receiver who had actually been invited to the open tryout instead of just walking off the street, who won't even cop to the fact that he never really returned a fumbled punt for a touchdown as shown in the film's glorious climax (it was called back because the punt returner muffed it). In "Gridiron Gang," do you ever recall seeing a story about a shooting at a Camp Kilpatrick football game that nearly forced the team to bow out of the CIF (1) (Common Intermediate Format) A standard video format used in videoconferencing. CIF formats are defined by their resolution, and standards both above and below the original resolution have been established. The original CIF is also known as Full CIF (FCIF). playoffs? Maybe because it didn't happen. In "Glory Road," don't officials at Texas A&M University-Commerce have a right to ask the Disney corporation and filmmaker Jerry Bruckheimer to apologize for inaccurately linking their school to some of the film's most racially charged scenes involving the 1966 Texas Western basketball team's run to the NCAA NCAA abbr. National Collegiate Athletic Association title? Maybe this issue funnels into the fact that to us, it was the group of excellent sports docs that stood out as the heroes of the silver screen in '06. "Heart Of The Game" made us care about a real girl, Darneila Russell. "Once In A Lifetime" made us mesmerized about how the NewYork Cosmos were put together for the greater good of American soccer. "In The Crease" made us understand youth hockey. All for real. No rewrites. "To be honest, when someone tells me about a sports movie, I don't ask who the filmmakers are or the actors in it -- just tell me the story," says Williams, a UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University) UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX grad that once was a researcher at Fox Sports. "If that interests me, and the story was entertaining, I may go back after watching the movie and ask, 'Did that really happen?"' In some cases, no. Honestly, maybe the best policy in this case would be to take every screenwriter's sports dramatic license and revoke it. CAPTION(S): 4 photos, 2 boxes Photo: (1) Author Randy Williams recently released a book on sports films. (2) MARK WAHLBERG (3) TOMMY MORRISON (4) VLAD VLAD Vertical Line Array DIFAR VLAD Vinten Low-Angle Dolly RADMANOVIC Box: (1) The Pop Quiz (2) sunday punch |
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