Hoosiers (1986)

hoosiers_movie_poster_copyright_fairuseThe last time I saw Hoosiers it was on VHS and I was only a boy and I hardly remember anything. Gene Hackman yelling. Dennis Hopper as a drunk. Jimmy the boy wonder, “The Picket Fence”, and of course Indiana basketball at its finest. But in those opening moments, as he drives into town and walks through the halls of his new home, I realized just how much I miss Gene Hackman. Yes, he’s still with us but the moment he decided to step out of the limelight and retire from his illustrious career as an actor, films got a little less exciting. His passionate often fiery charisma is dearly missed.

Norman Dale is a character who precisely reflects those very inclinations. He’s a man who had a long stint in the Navy following a lifetime ban from collegiate basketball. Supposedly he punched out some kid. The particulars aren’t all that important but what the town of Hickory represents for him is a second chance, a clean slate to leave his mark on.

And through a no-nonsense philosophy coupled with tough love he looks to get his pistons firing on all cylinders, the ultimate goal to lead his team to a winning season. However, his tactics early on receive the ire of most of the local fan base as well as many of his players who willfully walk out on his new regime.

Barbara Hershey is the skeptical love interest who is nevertheless a cut above most of the other locals. She went away for college and returned home in an effort to care for her family. She has the coach pegged early on but he is an individual who meets the pressure of the town’s expectations and combats them the only way he knows how, by coaching hard, fundamentally sound basketball.

Certainly, at first, his boys have their misgivings but once they buy into his system and realize that he will fight for them to the end, they really do become a team–the very word that they chant every time they leave their huddle. It’s meant to define them in every game they play. Hackman’s screaming tirades are just as good as I remember as he berates referees about every call imaginable, all in an effort to intercede on behalf of his players. Meanwhile. Dennis Hopper falls into the role of disgraced father catapulted to redemption with tremendous ease showcasing his typical savvy as a character actor.

Sometimes I consider the 1980s (rather unfairly) an era devoid of quality filmmaking but a film like The Hoosiers in its goodness, as sentimental as it is, feels so utterly sincere in all of its endeavors that it hard not to be won over. The rhythms of the plot are all there to develop one of the lasting feel-good stories of a generation and Hoosiers simultaneously set the groundwork for numerous subsequent and, more often than not, lesser sports films.

There’s one scene in particular that resonated with me. It’s not necessarily crucial but it’s poignant speaking to the character of the man before us. A young man comes to not only his teacher but to his coach questioning why Dale is giving the boy’s drunken, ostracized father a chance as an assistant coach. And essentially the answer has to do with grace. No one else will give the man a second chance. No one. But doesn’t he deserve it? Maybe not at all but Coach Dale is willing to give it to him. You get the sneaking suspicion he feels precisely this way because no one ever offered him any grace when he faltered. Small towns can often be rigid, set strictly in the ways of tradition. There’s no room for errancy or disgrace of any type but then coach comes to town and changes things. Redemption is possible.

As was commonplace at the time, every day is rife with Biblical imagery no more practical than an illusion to David versus Goliath in the State Championship. Because coach Dale and his boys are big fish in a small pond transported to a veritable ocean. But he says it all when with hands together in one final huddle he says proudly, “I love you guys.” At this point, the results really don’t matter though they play a good game. Something to be proud of, reflective of everything they’ve done the entire season, one last final exhibition of what they are — a team — first and last.

I was never a gifted basketball player hailing from the Kurt Rambis school of hustle and hard knocks and that makes me thoroughly appreciate this film. It’s fundamentally sound on and off the court. It also helps that I’ve always been a sucker for nostalgia. Whether they like it or not Indiana basketball will always be defined by Hoosiers.

4/5 Stars

6 thoughts on “Hoosiers (1986)

  1. Hi Tynan!

    I feel the same way about Mr. Hackman. There is no-one else like him. Stand-out films for me personally are The Conversation (1974), Mississippi Burning (1988), The Firm (1993) and The Royal Tenenbaums (2001). I’ll have to watch the French connection films again. I think I was too young to appreciate them the first time round.

    I know what you mean about the 80s – this era has a very special, often tacky feel to it – but the decade did produce some great films:

    (1980) Airplane!; Raging Bull; The Shining

    (1981) An American Werewolf In London; Body Heat; Chariots of Fire; Das Boot; Raiders Of The Lost Ark

    (1982) Blade Runner; E.T.; First Blood; Mad Max 2; The Thing; The Verdict; Tootsie

    (1983) Fanny and Alexander; Scarface; The Right Stuff

    (1984) Amadeus; Paris, Texas; The Killing Fields; The Terminator

    (1985) Back To The Future; Brazil; Ran; The Breakfast Club; Trading Places; Witness

    (1986) Aliens; Blue Velvet; Platoon; The Fly

    (1987) Angel Heart; Barfly; Good Morning, Vietnam; Full Metal Jacket; RoboCop; Tin Men; Withnail And I; Wall Street; Wish You Were Here

    (1988) A Fish Called Wanda; Cinema Paradiso; Dangerous Liaisons; Die Hard; Mississippi Burning; Rain Man; The Accused; The Last Temptation of Christ; The Naked Gun; The Unbearable Lightness of Being; The Vanishing

    (1989) Born on the Fourth of July; Dead Calm; Driving Miss Daisy; My Left Foot; The Fabulous Baker Boys; Sex, Lies, and Videotape (1989)

    All the best
    Shimky

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    • I wholeheartedly agree. The 80s is hardly a wasteland and I still have many of these films you listed to rewatch again and some to enjoy for the first time. That’s what I always get excited about.

      I’m also curious to watch Night Moves, I Never Sang for My Father, Get Shorty, and Scarecrow.

      Like

  2. Gene Hackman is one of the best film actors there has ever been. I see many similarities between him and Spencer Tracy, they are such natural actors and you never catch them acting (if that makes sense)because they just are the characters they play. Hoosiers is a brilliant film, it’s moving, well acted and has a gorgeous score. I’m not a big sports fan but I enjoy this film very much.

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