
Sup Connect!
I was watching Coach Carter for the third time. This movie is fastly becoming one of my all-time favorites. This distinction is not afforded the Directorial Debut of Thomas Carter's because I am a game-head-quite contrar!
Why do I hail this as one of my all time favorites. Well, its for didactic reasons. Its what the movie teaches us by not telling us its teaching us that thing, but that which we pull out from watching the movie. It was a far cry from a sports flick like Hosier (the Story with Gene Hackman about Indiana H.S. basketball).
When Coach Carter came into the gym and was introduce by the outgoing Coach who lost his vim and vigor to strategically develop boys into men-he said of Samuel L's character "He was an All American in two sports and holds records in scoring, assists, and steals; and he received a scholarship to George Mason."
I remember when I first watched this movie I commented to myself. Oh, Geo. Mason, they are in the CAAs-a Div. I school-sure, but a mid major (this is a disparaging remark)... I continued in the same line of detrius thought within myself: Coach Carter's character must not have been good enough to go to UNC-CH, affectionately called Carolina by b-ball afficionados.
This movie was prescient! It was prophetic because it didactically taught us what our priorities needed to be. Maybe, the Academy felt that it was presumptuous for Life to Immitate Art. I believe this is when Art is at its highest when it is didactic.
Guess who Geo. Mason beat this year to go the Elite 8-
Carolina...Guess who is in the Final Four this year-Geo. Mason.
This movie was so powerful and so moving that as an educator I felt this movie could have made a statement for the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Sciences. This movie spoke to the colossal failure of the urban education system as a proving ground for young scholars and leaders of tomorro, to the bedrock of commercialism and insolence-as identified in the character The Ty Crane in the movie Coach Carter when it first comes on.
Ty is the arrogant disrespectful show-boat that curses and snatches the mic from the journalist doing a live interview after the game.
Coach Carter does not permit his 'Sirs' to act-out but he admonishes them to be upstanding, industrious and above all-scholars!
Samuel L did a superb job instituting an unhearlded policy of academics taking precedent over an unbeaten record and all the glory that comes with running-the-tables!
This movie unfortunately was ahead of its time. I wonder what 'the people' were overlooking when they said Denzel's character Lonzo in Training was an ungly depiction of the Black male. However, I defended his art by saying it was fiction and it was his job to play the coniving duplicitious Lonzo to the 'T'.
I was naive! The characterization of the Black man by the Academy is in keeping with Americana. Americana is the characterisitc of American culture. How ironic to mention anything about character in this definition of America, which bespeaks of the Academy's role to identify outstanding thespians who act the part of characters.
"What Is Your Deepest Fear, Connect?"
Posted By: B. Dwight Foster, B.A., MS-MANAGEMENT
Tuesday, March 28th 2006 at 3:57PM
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