a crowd-pleasing civil rights drama made all the more potent because it wraps its uplifting story in the trappings of a sports movie.
The Express (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:110
Fresh:68
Rotten:42
Average Rating:6.2/10
Consensus: This inspirational sports biopic set in the the civil rights era is interesting even for non-football fans, and features a great performance by Dennis Quaid as tough-but-fair football coach.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for thematic content, violence and language involving racism, and for brief sensuality.
Runtime: 2 hrs 10 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:05-12-2008
Synopsis: As the first African American to receive college football's prestigious Heisman trophy, Ernie Davis (Rob Brown) is one of the most inspiring--and tragic--figures in the game (he died of leukemia at... As the first African American to receive college football's prestigious Heisman trophy, Ernie Davis (Rob Brown) is one of the most inspiring--and tragic--figures in the game (he died of leukemia at 23, before his first NFL game) His rise to athletic stardom coincides with the birth of the civil rights movement, and despite setbacks like a speech impediment, biased referees, and fear of white mob reprisals, Davis grabs the glory for a better America. Dennis Quaid plays Davis's coach and mentor, Ben Schwartzwalder, who lays on the discipline and training, first yielding to racist pressures, then supporting and spurring Davis to his peerless heights for Syracuse University's Orangemen. THE EXPRESS would need to work hard to fumble this ball, and it doesn't, making a smooth cinematic touchdown with heart, intelligence, guts, rapid-fire editing, and a minimum of cliché. The gridiron action is vividly and excitingly rendered as is a superb supporting cast, most notably Omar Benson Miller as Davis's wisecracking teammate. Plus, one can't go wrong with having seasoned sports movie go-to guy Quaid as Schwartzwalder; he's got this stuff so down, he could get an audience to stand up and cheer just by reading a grocery list. What sticks in the mind later though is the joy in watching these characters grow, as athletes and as people. And as they mature, they take all of America with them. [More]
Starring: Dennis Quaid, Rob Brown, Omar Benson Miller, Clancy Brown
Starring: Dennis Quaid, Rob Brown, Omar Benson Miller, Clancy Brown, Charles S. Dutton, Darrin Dewitt Henson, Nelsan Ellis
Director: Gary Fleder
Director: Gary Fleder
Screenwriter: Jeffrey Lieber, Charles Leavitt, John Lee Hancock, Scott Williams
Producer: John Davis
Composer: Mark Isham
Studio: Universal Pictures
Reviews for The Express
Davis deserves to be remembered, but as professionally crafted as The Express is, the movie is an almost instantly forgettable version of his life.
Occasionally engrossing but overlong biopic of late-1950s college football star Ernie Davis, the first African-American to win the Heisman Trophy.
Inspirational true-life sports films seem to be a dime a dozen, but when they're good, they're worth their weight in gold.
Has Dennis Quaid really never played a college football coach before? With his handsome, craggy face and likable intensity, he was born for the job.
While Ernie's on-field accomplishments were extraordinary, it was the environment in which he struggled to achieve them that makes him the worthy subject of a motion picture.
We’re not asking for another Brian’s Song, but does Davis’s tale have to seem like a rehash of Remember the Titans?
Based on a Davis biography, Gary Fleder's account is a noble attempt at humanizing the myth, but it succumbs to the worst sorts of sports-movie clichés.
Combines and surpasses both genres by virtue of its honest-to-gosh goodness.
Everything is literally and figuratively black and white in The Express.
In the past few years, we have seen lots of football films, and this is by far the best. I might even be so bold to say that this is the greatest football movie of all time.
Rob Brown's performance in the title role is solid and static, but Dennis Quaid's portrayal of coach Ben Schwartzwalder provides a convincing metaphor for a nation going through a crisis of conscience.
Dennis Quaid scores an emotional touchdown in this sturdy, factual football drama.
Latest News for The Express
January 17, 2009:
If the best thing said about a football movie, oddly enough, is that it can be entertaining for anyone who could care less about sports, then this is a solid touchdown. Skeptical couch potatoes take heart, a knowledge of the game is rarely required. ![]()
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January 13, 2009:
If the best thing said about a football movie, oddly enough, is that it can be entertaining for anyone who could care less about sports, then this is a solid touchdown. Skeptical couch potatoes take heart, a knowledge of the game is rarely required. ![]()
More...
October 11, 2008:
A fine addition to the recent genre of socially-conscious sports flicks highlighting individual feats for the collective meaning of those historic triumphs to the masses of black folks in search of civil rights. ![]()
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October 09, 2008:
Critics Consensus: Express Scores, Body of Lies Falls Flat
This week at the movies, we've got suspicious spies (Body of Lies, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe), gridiron greats (The Express, starring Rob Brown and Dennis... More...
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