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Herb Brooks: If we play them ten times, they'll
probably win nine. But not tonight. Tonight is our time.
So, before I actually saw the film, my uncle, a big sports fan sat me
down and told me, "You have to learn about the real story before you see
the movie", and then I sat down and watched an HBO documentary about the
story, and surely it's
one of the most amazing stories in sports, the stuff that legends are
made of, and it's a riveting underdog tale whether you're sports fan or
not. The king was dead, there was an oil crisis and the nation was
basically in turmoil, until the story of this one Olympic hockey team
took the world by storm and gave the nation just a little hope that is
sorely was in need of.
I'm what people call "Not a sports
fan" (made that up myself), so it's never usually on my list of things
to do when sports movies come out, but for "Miracle" I was intrigued.
Simply for the fact that this wasn't just a sports story, it was an
underdog tale, a tale of hope in a time without it, and a tale of people
coming together to take on their enemy on the ice.
This wasn't just a hockey game, it was a war being waged on that ice
rink, and we won. And that's a pretty damn good story of patriotism. In
the big screen presentation of the fateful tale of the Olympics of 1980
where a group of young men from rival colleges were brought together to
form the ultimate US team. With odds hopelessly stacked against them
going up against the undefeated Russian Olympics team, they pulled off a
feat and won the gold medal.
The defeat of the Russian team was a
complete shocker in the sport world since it seemed no one would be able
to defeat the Russians, but what's just as much as a feat is how good
this film is. Though, upon first glance the film might seem like a clone
of "Remember the Titans", "Miracle" is a lot more with an actual heart
to its storytelling. Director Gavin O'Connor has the immense and
daunting task of overtaking a story such as this with such an epic arc,
but he manages to handle it with a lot of skill method. The film has a
light blue tint which helps to create the sort of cold world the hockey
players live in and we get to feel what they feel when they're out on
the ice. A lot of the major hockey sequences are well choreographed and
are just beaming with excitement as we watch the players' views as they
drill through the ice, not to mention the amount of originality O'Connor
brings to the action sequences.
Now no amount of gratitude can be
expressed for the studios and producers choosing to go for unknown
actors and real hockey players for the pivotal roles of
the hockey team than going with big name stars. This not only manages to
bring a sense of genuine flavor to the sentiment this attempts to bring
across, but it takes what could have been an all-star hockey flick and
brings it down to our level. It was said a lot of big name actors
auditioned for the roles of the players, and it's a god blessing that
they ultimately went the smart route and chose real players, and sons of
the real players from the original team. The only real actor I
recognized during the film was Eddie Cahill who is sadly an underrated
actor who doesn't get enough good roles. He has the distinction of
playing one of the most important roles of the film, the goalie Jim
Craig who has that heartbreaking moment during the end of the game where
he's looking for his father as the team celebrates, it's a real moment
in history and a moment in the film that will leave you tearing up.
As for the acting, well the actors
who perform the duties essential to the success of the movie. They pull
in performances that need to be bought by the audience, they give good
performances, and I managed to buy every minute each of them were
on-screen. There's no lack of screen time for any of the players, which
would have been a big problem with big name actors. Now as for the main
role, the most important role Kurt Russell, well he pulls in the
performance of his career. For an actor whom I'd doubted in merit for
most of his
career, mainly starring in action fare, he manages to take on the
persona of the great Herb Brooks and literally embodies him. While he
doesn't completely look like him, he manages to attain the most
important aspect, his personality and body movements. He must have spent
days interviewing and researching Brooks because he goes all out for
this role and is
just amazing as Brooks. From the tacky clothing, to the newscaster
haircut, right down to his gruff, bulldog grimace, Russell does it all,
and then some and it would have been nice to seem his get some
recognition for the feat he pulls.
Otherwise he gives a shocking
performance here, as does Patricia Clarkson who plays Brooks' wife.
Clarkson is great here as she always is and manages to keep Brooks in
line when he manages to get ahead of himself and let the game take up
his time. Clarkson is great to watch here, but what's most satisfied is
the fact that writer Eric Guggenheim and
director O'Connor master the two key elements: the team and Brooks. What
was most appreciate was the fact they focused on the inner person of
Brooks, the man who trained this team to the bone, the fact he over
trained them when they slacked off, and the fact he was relentless in
his leadership and motivational skills. Brooks unfortunately died before
filming could be complete, but as the film states, "He lived it" so
there was no need for him to view the movie, but I think if he were
around, he would have been proud of the movie, because he and many other
men were apart of an amazing legacy, and this captures it with much
craftsmanship.
There were some flaws to the story and the actual facts towards the
story of "Miracle" that I was disappointed in. What was sad is that they
don't focus enough on the rivalry between the players. See, before these
guys were assembled, they were rivals from rival colleges. These guys
were bitter rivals who hated each other, and it was sad that they don't
focus enough on that element and built a real foundation with it.
Watching these players battle one another would have been a lot more
accurate and a lot more satisfactory towards the movie. These guys had
to get over their rivalries and basically bring it together and work as
a team and Brooks forced them to do so, and we never get to see enough
of that. What's worse is they don't focus on the Herb-isms. Herb Brooks
was known for creating and spouting these inspiration albeit very odd
one-line phrases and they don't show that enough which would have added
to Brooks and define him as a man on the screen for the audience. The
main flaw is the climax where Jim Craig with the American flag draped
over his shoulder cruises the ice looking for his father amidst the
roaring of the crowds. They manage to show us that Craig loved his
parents and especially his father, but they don't go for the money shot
which I assumed they would. He's shown briefly without sound, but if
they had drawn it out more it could have made for an utterly
heartbreaking moment in film.
This is a masterpiece with an inspiring tale of being the odds,
banding together, and beating the hell out of the Russians. It was a
miraculous feat to beat the Russian team, and the other feat is that the
film is so well done. Brilliant performances and a great story, this is
a real tearjerker.

- The real Herb Brooks died in a
car crash during principal photography and never viewed the
completed film.
- Over 4,000 men auditioned for
only 20 roles on the US Olympic Ice Hockey Team in the movie.
- Buzz Schneider is being
portrayed by his son, Billy Schneider.
- The scene where Herb Brooks
makes the team skate back and forth on the ice all night, after
their 3-3 tie with Norway, was actually done by the real actors over
a span of three days - 12 hours a day. The director wanted the
moment to be as realistic as possible.
- Hockey is the only sport I like
- Kurt Russell was in "Backdraft"
with Rebecca DeMornay, who was in "The Three Musketeers" with Keifer
Sutherland, who was in "Flatliners" with Kevin Bacon.
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