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DVD : Glory Road (Widescreen Edition) 

List Price:$14.99
Our Price: $11.49
You Save: $3.50 (23%)
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Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Buena Vista Home Video
EAN: 0786936292626
Label: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
Manufacturer: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
Region Code: 1
Release Date: June 06, 2006
Running Time: 118 minutes
Sales Rank: 4986
Studio: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
Theatrical Release Date: January 13, 2006




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Editorial Review:

Description:
The studio that brought you REMEMBER THE TITANS now delivers another winner with this exciting and inspirational true story of the team that changed college basketball -- and the nation -- forever! Josh Lucas (SWEET HOME ALABAMA) stars as future Hall of Fame coach Don Haskins of tiny Texas Western University, who bucks convention by simply starting the best players he can find: history's first all-African American lineup. In a turbulent time of social and political change, their unlikely success sends shock waves through the sport that follow the underdog Miners all the way to an epic showdown with all-white, #1 ranked Kentucky for the National Championship!

Amazon.com:
One of the greatest basketball games in NCAA history is immortalized in Glory Road, an engaging sports movie that dramatizes a pivotal milestone in the racial integration of college athletics. While it may not be as rousing as similar movies like Hoosiers or Friday Night Lights, this fact-based drama gains depth and substance from the groundbreaking achievement of Don Haskins (well-played by Josh Lucas), who coached the 1965-66 team from Texas Western University to the NCAA championship, using the first-ever all-black lineup in the championship game and forever changing the rules of college basketball. Texas Western's underdog season is followed from anxious start to glorious finish, as Haskins recruits many of his black star players from the North, including Bobby Joe Hill (Derek Luke) and Willie Cager (Damaine Radcliff), and this typically wholesome Disney film doesn't flinch from the harsh realities of racial tension (including player beatings and vandalized motel rooms) that Texas Western's black players had to struggle against as their victories began to draw national attention. Jon Voight (under heavy makeup) makes a memorable cameo appearance as legendary Kentucky coach Adolph Rupp, whose favored all-white team was no match for Texas Western, and Haskins' unforgettable achievement is celebrated in an end-credits sequence that demonstrates the positive ripple-effect of his color-blind coaching. Glory Road relies a bit too heavily on sports-movie clichés, but its shortcomings are easily overlooked in favor of its greater historical significance. --Jeff Shannon



Customer Reviews
Average Rating: out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Educational, even if inaccurate
I must admit that I don't know much about the actual Texas Western team this movie portrays. I understand that the story has compressed some facts in the name of dramatic license. Frankly, I am OK with that. If they had depicted the story along the real timelines, etc. the criticism would have been that the plot moved too slowly. I think the essence of the story is true if not all of the facts.
And it is true that the story line follows the typical Disney formula. I'm OK with that as well. ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Great Movie
I'm so happy that most of America now treats all Americans equal most of time. The 60's were a sad, scary time. The movie was superb!



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Unfair to whites...
I think most reasonable Americans will say that they are not racist and deplore it. This is different then saying you agree with cultural values that certain races have proposed to adopt for themselves. Glory Road is a fine story, no disagreement, but like all racial movies, it lacks honesty, and fair dealing.Truth be told, racism is not an issue today for blacks, period. It was then. This story does a fine job of telling it, and making it halfway interesting. But, there is always more to a story ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - quite disappointed
The movie was way too similar to Remember the Titans and they're portrayal of coach Rupp was disturbing. I agree with one of the previous posts that they changed a lot just to make the movie more appealing. The movie made it seem as if black players were a whole new thing when coach Haskins introduced this team when in reality there were many black players. But i digress since these faults were already discussed in another post.Had Remember the Titans not been released, i may rate this movie higher, ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent!!!!
This is one of the best movies I've seen.It brought out the issue of race back in the 60s without being graphic.Very well done.



Glory Road (Widescreen Edition)

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