Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Review: Any Given Sunday (1999)

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Steve Kong

unread,
Nov 13, 2000, 8:51:05 PM11/13/00
to
Any Given Sunday
Review by Steve Kong
The Hard Boiled Movie Guide
http://boiledmovies.sbay.com/

On any given Sunday during football season living rooms across America are
filled with cheering men, with their beers in hand and their eyes glued to
a TV screen. These men sit glued to their TV sets watching warriors. What
happens on the field is pure; it's the game of football. What happens
before, during, and after the game off field, well that's business and the
aim of Oliver Stone's Any Given Sunday is to show what this business is.

Any Given Sunday is an ensemble film, but the three lead roles go to Al
Pacino, Jamie Foxx, and Cameron Diaz. Pacino is the head coach of the
football team. Foxx is the puking new quarterback of the team. And Diaz
is the former-owner's daughter who has taken over the franchise. The
conflicts are a bound in this film. Pacino's Coach D'Amato and Foxx's
Beaman fight it out over how to play the game. Beaman goes from third
string quarterback all the way to first string after the aging star
quarterback, Rooney (Dennis Quaid), is injured. Beaman is not quite a team
player and doesn't listen to the coach. D'Amato and Pagniacci (Diaz) are
at each other's throats also. D'Amato is losing his touch with his old
school style of coaching and Pagniacci wants more for the coach including
more wins.

Any Given Sunday is more of a movie about what happens off the field than
what happens on the field. We can see this by the way the on field play is
shot. The games are shot in a MTV style, which makes each and every hit
look like a train hitting a car. The cuts are fast and furious and it
makes the game look great though even if you tried you couldn't even
figure out what is happening on field. Cameras are placed everywhere and
this visceral style puts the audience right on the field with the
players. What is ironic is that the MTV style used for the football games
is so well done that when Stone puts Beaman in an actual music video for
the film it looks chintzy.

What happens off the field is engrossing and the film could have been cut
maybe 15 to 20 minutes if the nicely shot but useless on field stuff was
cut out. We see the locker room speeches, the politics of how a team is
made viable. We see how players and coaches are just commodities. The
game as it is played professionally is pure only on the field and even at
that it is played for the money, as we see in LL Cool J's
character. Endorsements are what drive the players; money from wins is
what drives the owners. It almost seems like there is no love for the game
and Stone makes this quite clear. Stone is out to make a point and the
point is that professional football, or any professional sport, is more
about corporate earnings than it is about the love of playing the game.

All the actors in the film do well, but most of the ensemble cast is not
given much to do. It can plainly be seen with the James Woods character
who seems likes a fully developed character, but does not get enough time
onscreen to develop. Pacino spends his time chewing scenery, which is
fine, that's his style. Diaz is good. But, the big surprise was Jaime
Foxx. He plays his role perfect. He knows when to be cocky, he knows when
to be repentant. Foxx is perfect in this film. I hope he ventures out and
does more roles like this. Kudos to Foxx for a perfect performance.

I'll admit now that I'm not a huge fan of Oliver Stone. There is just
something about the films that he makes that turns me off, perhaps it is
the way he tries to shove a message down the audience's throats with each
and every of his films. I don't know. But, with Any Given Sunday I was
enthralled and entertained. This film is highly entertaining and well
deserves the Don't Miss endorsement.


--

0 new messages