Actors: Kevin Costner, Rafael Martinez, Johnny Ortiz, Carlos Pratts
Format: Multiple Formats, Blu-ray, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
Language: English (DTS-HD High Res Audio), Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1)
Subtitles: Spanish, English
Dubbed: French, Spanish
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1
Number of discs: 1
Rated: PG
Studio: Walt Disney Studios
Release Date: June 2, 2015
Run Time: 129 minutes
Sports movies
released under the Disney logo are usually predictable from the trailer alone,
following a formula that hasn’t changed much since the horribly contrived Remember the Titans. While McFarland , USA
boasts a slightly better screenplay, nearly every aspect of the film aligns
with this specific group of films. Based on a true story, dealing with issues
of diversity, and centering on a group of underdogs, McFarland , USA
feels like a paint-by-numbers Disney sports film, but that doesn’t always
detract from its charms. Audiences going into a film like this know what they
are getting, and this one delivers what is expected; no more and no less.
Kevin Costner
seems to be on a bit of an upswing recently, mostly due to understated
performances in Draft Day, Black or White, as well as Coach Jim
White in McFarland , USA . After losing several jobs
as a football coach, White must take a job teaching at a high school in the low
income California
farming town the film takes its name from. With many of the Latino students
forced to run as their only means for transportation and strengthened by days
working with their parents in the fields of the farms, Coach White sees their
potential in the endurance-based sport of cross-country racing. The biggest
difficulty with this vision is convincing the students that the endeavor is
worthwhile, especially coming from an outsider with a name fitting the color of
his skin. It doesn’t help that White has no experience with the sport itself.
With Costner
being the biggest name in the cast, followed by Maria Bello in the blandly
written role of his wife, much of the film’s focus remains on the journey of
Coach White rather than the players, with the exception of an occasional
melodramatic sequence or cliché representation of cultural differences. This
makes for a movie that feels like it wants to be progressive while
simultaneously feeling dated. Part of the problem is that the racing storyline
is predictable, but even worse are the non-sport related sub-plots that attempt
to add drama. Though they allow a reprieve from the one-note underdog
narrative, the melodrama muddles the film more than helping. At 129-minutes,
much of this could have been removed for a more concise tale. We know where the
movie is going anyway, so it is often only irritating to be deterred so often
by insignificant sub-plots such as the daughter’s foray into dating or the
silly gang scuffle she is inexplicably pulled into as a result.
The Blu-ray
release highlights the true aspects of the narrative, including a featurette
with the real Coach White and members of the 1987 cross-country team joined by
Costner, as well as a featurette about the town of McFarland . Also included are a handful of
deleted/extended scenes, as well as a music video performed by Juanes. The
Blu-ray combo pack also comes with a Digital HD copy of the film.
Entertainment Value:
7.5/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 6.5/10
Historical
Significance: 6/10
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